Openpedia.org > On Wikipedia and Archaeology

[ Bright Meadow] I was flicking through the latest edition of British Archaeology recently (number 88) (I need to at least pretend I am keeping up with my field) and an article caught my eye. It was in the new(ish) column on “On The Web”, which always feels a little crammed and tacked on, but I’m not the editor, so there’s nothing I can do about it.

Some related posts from Technorati and Google.

xenoarchaeology: Science Fiction Fantastic Fiction Internet Speculative Fiction Data Base Project Gutenberg USS Jaguar Library Worth1000.com Xeno-Archaeological Project Journals Antiquity Astrobiology MagazineBritish Archaeology Journal of the British Interplanetary Society Nature New Scientist Organisations British Interplanetary Society Long Now Foundation Planetary Society Royal Anthropological Institute SETI Institute (via Cosmos)

http://archaeoastronomy.co.uk  Archaeoastronomy: In December the discovery of the oldest flint tools in the British Isles was published in Nature. If you’re not a scientist then this is not an easy journal to get your hands on. (via Cosmos)

http://alexbordessa.blogspot.com  Alex's Historical Fiction: Hopefully, there'll be so much fuss about it that it will remain in Britain, preferably in a museum close to where it was found. Most archaeological finds aren't this spectacular, and the developer wouldn't even bother thinking he/she could sell them at a profit. (via Cosmos)

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