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Atlas of Ancient Archaeology

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The most comprehensive Atlas of Ancient Archaeological sites. Includes sites in Africa, British Isles, France, Germany and the Netherlands, Scandinavia, Eastern Europe, Iberia, Central Mediterranean, Greece and the Aegean, Anatolia and Soviet Armenia, Egypt, Mesopotamia, Iran, and the Arabian Gulf, Syria, Lebanon, and Palestine, India, South East Asia, North America, Mesoamerica, and South America.

272 pages, Unknown Binding

First published January 1, 1974

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About the author

Jacquetta Hawkes

57 books13 followers
Jacquetta Hawkes OBE FBA (5 August 1910 – 18 March 1996) was an English archaeologist and writer. She was the first woman to study the Archaeology & Anthropology degree course at the University of Cambridge. A specialist in prehistoric archaeology, she excavated Neanderthal remains at the Palaeolithic site of Mount Carmel with Yusra and Dorothy Garrod. She was a representative for the UK at UNESCO, and was curator of the "People of Britain" pavilion at the Festival of Britain.

Her second husband was J.B. Priestley.

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Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews
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Author 94 books136 followers
January 30, 2017
Granted this is a bit dated now, but it's still interesting in that its short entries often caught my imagination enough to go looking for more information elsewhere. To be honest I'd rather some of those entries focused more on the context of particular sites and less on their measurements, but as different regions were described by different contributors, some entries were more readable than others.

More seriously in a book that calls itself an atlas, there is also a total absence of south-east Asian, Indonesian, Australasian or Pacific Island sites (even Angkor Wat, Borobudur, Easter Island, and 50,000 year old Australian rock art is dismissed). I can't reasonably expect an atlas of this kind to cover every archaeological site - and the introduction admits it has had to select for space - but when you're ignoring entire continents I think you need to take a serious look at your table of contents.

And this is petty, as most of the illustrations were very helpful, but whoever made the poor decision to have tiny black type on a dark green background in some of them... boo! It's well nigh unreadable.
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