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advertise in the Events and Courses section contact:
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Rhys's
Day: Call for papers
Rhys Jones Memorial Seminar:
an occasion of research papers and celebration of Rhys Jones's
life and work
To be
held at the Society of Antiquaries of London on Saturday
21st September 2002
Organised
by Chris Chippendale and Stephen Aldhouse-Green, Universities
of Cambridge and Wales (Newport), for the Society of Antiquaries
and the Prehistoric Society.
The
event is designed as a tribute to the life of Rhys Jones and
will focus on the themes of the archaeology of Wales and Australia,
Quaternary dating, and current issues in hunter-gatherer archaeology
Rhys
Jones died in AD 2001 and was buried in Australia. Friends,
family and colleagues in England are organizing a day of celebration
in central London, at the Society of Antiquaries, on Saturday
21 September 2002 - the nearest Saturday to the anniversary
of Rhys's passing.
We plan
a day of sparkling research papers on themes Rhys worked with
and cared for - Australia, Wales, the palaeolithic, dating
and hunter-gatherer archaeology. In the morning and afternoon,
there will be papers on those topics, then towards the end
of the afternoon some specfic memories of Rhys and, to close,
a social event with good Australian wine.
All
are welcome. There will be advance booking with tickets
at a modest charge to cover the day's expenses. This advance
notice is to announce the Day and its date, and to invite
anyone who would like to contribute a paper to the Day to
contact Christopher Chippindale Australia, hunter-gatherer
research, Australian-based Quaternary dating) or Stephen Aldhouse-Green
(Wales, palaeolithic, British-based Quaternary dating). There
will be later postings of the details on Britarch and AusArch
for those who might like to attend, but not themselves contribute
a paper.
For further
details contact:
Christopher
Chippindale cc43@cam.ac.uk
or
Stephen
Aldhouse-Green stephen.aldhouse-green@newport.ac.uk


World
archaeology courses at the University of Oxford
Oxford
offers both a
- One-year
MSt (Master
of Studies) degree in World Archaeology and
a
- Two-year
MPhil (Master of Philosophy)
degree in World Archaeology
Students
make full use of the opportunities for study and research
provided by Oxford's Ashmolean and Pitt Rivers Museums and
their respective libraries, as well as the University's other
archaeological resources.
These
taught courses in World Archaeology allow graduate students
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and further back in time than the development of farming.
Major areas of regional expertise lie in sub-Saharan Africa,
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members have particular research interests in, and can provide
teaching that covers, hunter-gatherer archaeology, the archaeology
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For more
information see our web site: http://athens.arch.ox.ac.uk/masters/


MSc
in Environmental and Contextual Archaeology
Department
of Geography and Anthropology, Oxford Brookes University
http://www.brookes.ac.uk/schools/social/postgrad/envarch/masters_home.html
click
to enlarge (higher resolution posters
for printing available in Microsoft and PDF format):




Ninth
International Conference on Hunting and
Gathering Societies (CHAGS 9)
9-13
September 2002: Edinburgh, Scotland
Theme:
'Hunter-gatherer studies and the reshaping of anthropology'.
Many
of the 35 sessions of interest to archaeologists. Many places
open for participants; a very few places still left for speakers.
Co-convenors:
Professor Alan Barnard: a.barnard@ed.ac.uk
and
Professor Tim Ingold: tim.ingold@abdn.ac.uk
Announcements,
with full details of sessions, fees, etc. and the registration
form are available from the conference website: http://www.abdn.ac.uk/chags9

©
Western Academic & Specialist Press Ltd 2002
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