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Harvard Museum of the Ancient Near East Tours Led by Harvard Students

Harvard Museum of the Ancient Near East 6 Divinity Avenue, Cambridge, MA, United States

Available during the Harvard academic year Sundays at 1:00 pm, October 6, 2024–April 27, 2025. See blackout dates.* *Blackout dates: December 1, 2024–January 26, 2025; and March 16–23, 2025. This free tour, led by Harvard students, explores the Mediterranean Marketplaces: Connecting the Ancient World exhibition and how the movement of goods, peoples, and ideas around […]

16th Annual Central Texas Society Archaeology Playdate

The University of Texas at Austin; Patton Hall 0.130 East 23rd Street, Austin, Texas, United States

This event is a roundup of short presentations by UT faculty, students, and affiliates involved in archaeology, art history, or material culture of the classical and ancient Mediterranean world, as well as colleagues working more broadly in premodern or pre-contact archaeology, art, archaeological science, or historic preservation. Talks present work that is conceptual, in-progress, or […]

TILL DEATH DO WE PART: Archaeological Interventions in Massive Discard Events

University of Southern California Trousdale Parkway, Los Angeles, CA, United States

An illustrated talk that reveals the things we leave behind and considers what we owe to the objects that once constituted the social lives of households. Professor Anthony Graesch of Connecticut College shares his recent research, an archaeological intervention in life's final massive discard event. If you are coming from off-campus and are not a […]

International Archaeology Day

University of Florida 201 Criser Hall, PO Box 114000, Gainesville, FL, United States

Our executive board will be working with art history, classics, and anthropology departments to plan an outreach event on University of Florida campus. This event will coincide with our national lecture and may also include a "membership drive".

Lecture: Communal Water, Invisible Labor: Modeling the Social Impact of Pompeii’s Street Fountains

Joseph Merrick Jones Hall 108, Tulane University Freret Street, New Orleans, LA, United States

A lecture by Professor Matthew Notarian (Hiram College, OH) Abstract: The remarkable preservation of the Roman city of Pompeii provides unprecedented insight into an aqueduct-fed urban water system. Visitors often marvel at the city’s network of public street fountains, but few consider the practical consequences of the tedious but essential labor required to transport water […]