
AAIA Podcast “Left Outta Field” Episode 2
$post_categories = wp_get_post_categories( ); $cat = array(); foreach($post_categories as $c){ $cat = get_category( $c ); echo $cat[1]; } ?>In our second episode we speak with Dr Susan Lupack (Macquarie University). She led one of the few Australian-run archaeological projects that was able to conduct fieldwork in 2020, shortly before the world went into lockdown. Dr Lupack’s planned sabbatical in Vienna was subsequently thrown into chaos as the pandemic went into full swing.

Visual Connectivity and Control in Ancient Lucania at the EAA
$post_categories = wp_get_post_categories( ); $cat = array(); foreach($post_categories as $c){ $cat = get_category( $c ); echo $cat[1]; } ?>The AAIA’s Brett Myers recently presented his research into ancient South Italian hillforts at the 2021 European Association of Archaeologists conference.

Art and Archaeology: Creative arts on an archaeological site
$post_categories = wp_get_post_categories( ); $cat = array(); foreach($post_categories as $c){ $cat = get_category( $c ); echo $cat[1]; } ?>Emma Conroy and Craig Barker explain a unique relationship between contemporary artists and the Paphos Theatre Archaeological Project.

Finds Stories: Addressing Mobility through Object and People Biographies
$post_categories = wp_get_post_categories( ); $cat = array(); foreach($post_categories as $c){ $cat = get_category( $c ); echo $cat[1]; } ?>From 27-29 August the AAIA Athens Office hosted the inaugural face to face meeting for the Erasmus+ Project: Finds Stories: Addressing Mobility through Object and People Biographies took place in Athens, hosted by The Australian Archaeological Institute at Athens (AAIA).

Judy Birmingham: impressions and influences
$post_categories = wp_get_post_categories( ); $cat = array(); foreach($post_categories as $c){ $cat = get_category( $c ); echo $cat[1]; } ?>It was Judy’s excited fascination and enthusiasm for archaeology and how to do it that drew me into the subject and set me on a lifetime path of research and teaching

Introducing MAARC: a new initiative connecting Australasian archaeologists working in the Mediterranean
$post_categories = wp_get_post_categories( ); $cat = array(); foreach($post_categories as $c){ $cat = get_category( $c ); echo $cat[1]; } ?>The Mediterranean Archaeology Australasian Research Community (MAARC) was conceived in Auckland in February 2020 during the international conference ‘Exchanging Ideas: Trade, Technology and Connectivity and pre-Roman Italy‘ when, over a coffee, we lamented the fact that there was no regional network or annual event that really catered to Mediterranean archaeology. Given that void, we noted …