Wednesday, April 15, 2026

Open Access Digital Library: AMAR: Archive of Mesopotamian Archaeological Site Reports

[Originally posted in AWOL 27 July 2009. Most recently updated 15 April 2026]

AMAR: Archive of Mesopotamian Archaeological Site Reports

The Archive of Mesopotamian Archaeological Reports (AMAR) collection is part of the Iraq Cultural Heritage Program Grant. The Iraq Cultural Heritage Project (ICHP) was established in 2008 through a grant from the US Embassy in Baghdad. The Cultural Affairs Office at the Embassy oversees the project. International Relief and Development (IRD), a US-based non-governmental organization, implements the project for the Embassy. The project director, Elizabeth Stone, has directed archaeological excavations in Iraq, engaged in advanced training for Iraqi archaeologists, and attempted to document and stem the damage to Iraq's archaeological sites. Dr. Stone is collaborating with the University Libraries at Stony Brook University to make the AMAR collection available online. Before developing this online collection, she contributed more than one hundred digitized volumes to the ETANA website. The AMAR project aims to digitize 500 archaeological site reports describing archaeological excavations in Iraq and the immediately surrounding areas (Turkey, Syria, Iran, and the Gulf). This will include both out-of-copyright as well as in-copyright and in-print materials. This online collection is intended to provide basic sources of information to our colleagues in Iraq and other archaeologists working in the Middle East. The digital files are only to be distributed from the AMAR website. Individuals, libraries, institutions, and others may download one complimentary copy for their own personal use. Links to the AMAR website are welcomed. 

The Digital Archaeological Atlas of the Holy Land

[First posted in AWOL 11 August 2011, updated 15 April 2026]

The Digital Archaeological Atlas of the Holy Land

 

The Digital Archaeological Atlas of the Holy Land (DAAHL) is an international project that brings together experts in information technology including Geographic Information Systems (GIS) and the archaeology of the Holy Land (modern Israel, Palestine, Jordan, southern Lebanon, Syria and the Sinai Peninsula) to create the first on-line digital atlas of the region held sacred to the three great monotheistic faiths - Judaism, Christianity and Islam. Using the power of spatial information systems such as Google Maps and Google Earth, GIS, the tens of thousands of recorded archaeological sites for the region - from the remote prehistoric periods to the early 20th century - will be entered into a comprehensive database along with site maps, photographs and artifacts. The historical and archaeological content for this project will be developed by a team of over 30 international scholars working in the region, helping to provide the data used to create the Atlas. This website and its content will serve as the prototype "knowledge node" of a more comprehensive Digital Archaeological Atlas Network for the Mediterranean region

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    Meaningful Practices: Non-scribal Communication in the Aegean and the Near East during the Bronze Age

    Edited by: Maria Emanuela AlbertiGiulia DionisioAnna Margherita Jasink
     

    The volume explores some aspects of the nonscribal communication systems used by the Aegean and Eastern Mediterranean societies in the Bronze Age, ranging from seals, tokens, potter’s marks, weight and capacity systems, and marks on loom weights. The chronological span goes from the 4th millennium to the entire 2nd millennium BC, through the presentation of several case studies and methodological considerations. In these societies, writing is used, especially in official and administrative contexts, but nevertheless a wide range of other parallel communication codes is present. It is therefore necessary to investigate the semantic and social space occupied by these “other” codes and their importance also in a scribal context. This is a type of documentation that is rarely analysed as a whole and in a comparative way: and this is precisely the strength of the volume. 


     

    Tuesday, April 14, 2026

    Meteorology Beyond Borders: Ancient and Modern Reflections

    Volume Editors: Giouli Korobili and Teun L Tieleman 

    Ancient meteorology was not just about predicting the weather but a broader notion involving the study of phenomena that belong under such disciplines as astronomy and geology today. This collective volume deals with meteorological phenomena in a wide variety of texts from classical antiquity: philosophical and scientific, literary, poetical, historical as well as medical. It takes a special approach in its sustained focus on how ancient authors sought to anchor novel insights into the work of their predecessors, tracing the development of meteorology beyond antiquity well into (early) modern times and adding perspectives from present-day science.