enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Flint Dibble - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flint_Dibble

    Flint Dibble is an American archaeologist and science communicator, whose research focuses on foodways in ancient Greece, and whose science communication promotes the field of archaeology and debunks pseudoarchaeology. He teaches at Cardiff University, where he is the Marie Skłodowska-Curie Research Fellow leading the ZOOCRETE project.

  3. Mike Parker Pearson - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mike_Parker_Pearson

    Parker Pearson was born in 1957, in Wantage, Berkshire. [4] [5] He would later inform interviewers that he first took an interest in the past when searching for fossils in his father's driveway gravel aged 4, extending that interest into the human past aged 6 when he read a library book entitled Fun with Archaeology. [6]

  4. Survey (archaeology) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Survey_(archaeology)

    Ground penetrating radar is a tool used in archaeological field surveys. In archaeology, survey or field survey is a type of field research by which archaeologists (often landscape archaeologists) search for archaeological sites and collect information about the location, distribution and organization of past human cultures across a large area (e.g. typically in excess of one hectare, and ...

  5. Britain at Low Tide - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Britain_at_Low_Tide

    Britain at Low Tide is an archaeology programme, focusing on intertidal archaeology, that first aired on 19 November 2016 [2] and ran for three episodes. The premise of the programme was that the presenters, Alex Langlands and Tori Herridge visit parts of Britain's coast along with coastal archaeologists showing their finds and the history behind them.

  6. 1970 in archaeology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1970_in_archaeology

    October 21 - Loose timber from the wreck of the Tudor warship Mary Rose found in the Solent off the coast of England. October 25 - Submarine CSS H. L. Hunley (sunk in action 1864) is claimed to be located in Charleston Harbor, South Carolina, by E. Lee Spence. First Botorrita plaque. Sweet Track discovered by John Sweet in the Somerset Levels ...

  7. Jamestown Rediscovery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jamestown_Rediscovery

    Douglas Owsley (left) and Danny Schmidt examining the possible remains of Captain Bartholomew Gosnold (left). Jamestown Rediscovery is an archaeological project of Preservation Virginia (formerly the Association for the Preservation of Virginia Antiquities) investigating the remains of the original English settlement at Jamestown established in the Virginia Colony in North America beginning on ...

  8. John Steane (archaeologist) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Steane_(archaeologist)

    The Archaeology of Medieval England and Wales (1984) The Archaeology of the Medieval English Monarchy (1993) Oxfordshire (1996) The Archaeology of Power (2001) Traditional Buildings in the Oxford Region c.1300–1840 (2013) Steane also exhibited watercolours and drawings. [7]

  9. Ben Robinson - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ben_Robinson

    In the episode he followed the paths of the Zeppelin attacks over the East of England. [7] Also in 2014, Robinson co-presented the ITV series Secrets from the Sky with historian Bettany Hughes. [8] In 2015 Robinson co-presented the BBC One documentary The Last Journey of the Magna Carta King with Professor Stephen Church. [9]