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“Discoveries at Cooper’s Ferry Increase our Knowledge of Early PNW Peoples” by Loren G. Davis PhD, Department of Anthropology, Oregon State University

Northwest Museum of Arts and Culture (MAC) 2316 West 1st Avenue, Spokane, Washington, United States

Archaeological excavations at the Cooper’s Ferry site reveal a long record of repeated human occupation beginning sometime before 15,785 cal BP and extending to ~2,000 years ago. This site, which is the location of an ancient village known to the Nez Perce Indian Tribe as Nipéhe, bears the earliest well-dated evidence of people in the […]

The Ever Changing Face of Indigenous People

Science Center Auditorium (SC 114) at The University of Dayton. 450 East Stewart St, Dayton, OH, United States

The second presentation in the Archaeological Institute of America's Dayton Society 2023-2024 Lecture Series presented by Guy Jones, President of the Miami Valley Council for Native Americans.. The Ever Changing Face of Indigenous People The identity of Indigenous people has and will probably change again and again as new discoveries come to light. As the […]

Art expressions of the intimate life in Pompeii, the Lupanare Grande” by Cyril Dumas (Curator at the Musee Yves Brayer Baux de Provence)

WEBINAR (St. Louis) St. Louis, MO

18 November 2023, Saturday at 2 PM (Central Standard Time Zone). ZOOM lecture: "Art expressions of the intimate life in Pompeii, the Lupanare Grande" by Cyril Dumas (Curator at the Musee Yves Brayer Baux de Provence). Zoom room opens at 1:45 and lecture promptly starts at 2 PM. Sign in at 1:45, please...

Bones, Stones & Genes – Seven Million Years of Human Evolution with Geoffrey Clark, PhD

Arizona State University Tempe, Design North Buidling, Room CDN 60 810 NS Forest Mall, Tempe, AZ, United States

Bones, Stones, & Genes: Seven Million Years of Human Evolution Geoffrey A. Clark, Ph.D. Regents' Emeritus Professor Arizona State University School of Human Evolution & Social Change Institute of Human Origins Perhaps the greatest story ever told is how we became the last and sole surviving member of our lineage, the hominins – modern humans, […]

Henry T. Rowell Lecture

The Johns Hopkins University (Homewood campus) Gilman Hall 50, Baltimore, MD, United States

Please join the AIA Baltimore Society for the Henry T. Rowell Lecture. Dr. Marie-Lys Annette (The Johns Hopkins University) will be speaking on "Tattooed Mummies and Female Figurines from Ancient Egypt: New Results from Deir el-Medina." To attend virtually, please use the following link: https://towson-edu.zoom.us/j/98825554469?pwd=bGpsWXFuemQvRVcrL1VQaU10WWlqZz09.

Landscapes of Predation: Exploring Hostile Social Environments in Small-Scale Societies presented by Dr. Catherine Cameron (CU Boulder, Anthropology)

Ancient social environments are difficult to reconstruct, and archaeologists have a much poorer grasp of how the social environment affects where and how people live. One sort of social behavior that is often visible archaeologically is violence: raiding and warfare. Using ethnohistoric cases, I identify “landscapes of predation” created by intense social violence. I will […]

Contexts and Circumstances in Designing the Divine in Ancient Egypt

ARCE Egyptology Lectures Room 20 Social Sciences Building University of California, Berkeley, CA, United States

The American Research Center in Egypt, Northern California Chapter, and the Department of Middle Eastern Languages and Cultures, University of California, Berkeley, invite you to attend a lecture by Dr. Jennifer Miyuki Babcock, Pratt Institute: "Contexts and Circumstances in Designing the Divine in Ancient Egypt" Sunday, December 10, 2023, 3 PM Pacific Standard Time Room […]