I looked for a Yahoo Club about Archaeology, and there wasn't one, so I decided to start one myself! Since then loads more archaeology clubs were started up. More recently we have been converted to Yahoo groups and have since been renamed archaeology2. Follow the link below to get to the club homepage for information on members' homepages, pen-pal page, information on archaeology courses, and a few other things! We origially set our club chat time for 5PM eastern time /10pm GMT on Sundays, but other suggestions would be appreciated as it does not appear to be popular! I have no objecton to people linking to this site from their web-pages or advertising their archaeology sites on the list as long as they are on topic. We recently appointed 5 moderators to keep conversation on topic - especially during the digging season when some of us will be stuck in a field without access to a computer! Please do not discuss religion. Please keep your e-mail address current! People whose e-mail addresses are bouncing, those who aren't subscribed and non-plaintext and posts with attachments will automatically bounce - not my doing, its the way the group is set up. We have just started to moderate new members on thir first post due the quantities of spam we have received, so after your first post is approved you can carry on as normal
I was surprised to see so many studies on metallurgy when I was a foundryman in the early 70s we never had scholars in the foundry. Doing more than reading I
Oh goodness, this is more than I hoped for... thank you so much for this. Good thing I'm spending a large portion of my day in the library tomorrow:-) Thanks a
Hi Yigal et al... I was wondering if you could point me towards any references on the origins and spread of metallurgy in the Middle/Near East. I'm writing
It seems to me that the chance of this actually referring to Jesus is very unlikely. Jesus would not have been known as "Christos", even to his closest