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THE EUROPEAN ARCHAEOLOGIST

Published by the European Association of Archaeologists, c/o Institute of Archaeology CAS, Letenská 4, 11801 Praha 1, 
Czech Republic. Tel./Fax: +420 257014411,

ISSN 1022-0135

The European Association of Archaeologists (EAA) is a membership-based association open to all archaeologists and other related or interested individuals or bodies. The EAA currently has over 1100 members on its database from 41 countries world-wide working in prehistory, classical, medieval and later archaeology. They include academics, aerial archaeologists, environmental archaeologists, field archaeologists, heritage managers, historians, museum curators, researchers, scientists, teachers, conservators, underwater archaeologists and students of archaeology. 

The Association is a fully democratic body, governed by an Executive Board elected by the Full members and is representative of the different regions of Europe. At all times the EAA adheres to its Statutes.

The main forum for EAA members to interact is represented by the Annual Meetings.  These lively and well-attended conferences, held every September in a different country of Europe, are one of the highlights of the archaeological year.

The official language of the EAA is English, but if you have difficulties with English you can communicate with us in any major European language. 

The Association organises conferences and seminars and acts as an advisory body on all issues relating to the archaeology of Europe. The EAA Annual Meetings offer a unique opportunity for archaeologists from all over Europe and beyond to exchange ideas and opinions on archaeological practice and theory following the aim to contribute to a continuing discussion concerning the numerous identities and contexts of European archaeology.

For more information visit EAA Website.
 

 

SESSION REPORTS
 
Malga, Buron, Alm, Shieling, Seter, Salaą, Orry and Cayolar (by John Collis)
New perspectives on lithic scatters and landscapes: Evaluation and selection in and outside the context of archaeological resource management (by E. Rensink and C. J. Bond)
Guidelines for in situ preserved archaeological sites and areas (by Vibeke Vandrup Martens and Michel Vorenhout)
Vocational training of archaeological heritage (by Marjolijn Kok and Rosa Martínez)
Material chains and networks in space: Production sequences, processes, chaînes opératoires and object biographies in Bronze and Iron Ages workshops (by Barbara Armbruster, Alexis Gorgues and Katharina Rebay-Salisbury)
'Princely sites', oppida and open settlements - New approaches to
urbanization processes in the Iron Age of central and western Europe (by Manuel Fernández-Götz, Holger Wendling, Katja Winger and Jesús Álvarez-Sanchís)
From bone to bead: Developments in European research on worked osseous materials (by Aline Averbouh and Alice M. Choyke)
Landscape of our ancestors: Current state and future visionGuidelines for in situ preserved archaeological sites and areas (by Emmet Byrnes, Cees Van Rooijen and Karl Cordemans)
Examining diseases and impairments in social archaeology: Current issues and future optionsGuidelines for in situ preserved archaeological sites and areas (by Darek Błaszczyk, Magdalena Domicela Matczak and Leszek Gardeła)
Place and space in Iron Age Europe (by Ian Armit, University of Bradford, UK (I.Armit@bradford.ac.uk) and Phil Mason)
Beyond the frontiers of Medieval Europe (by Soeren M. Sindbaek and Sam Nixon)
Public appropriations of archaeologists' narratives (by Thomas Meier and Elisabeth Niklasson)
Interpreting maritime archaeological record in and around water (by Riikka Alvik and Elena Pranckenaite)
Living and being in wetlands and lakes (by Benjamin Jennings)
Flooded Stone Age – Towards an overview of submerged settlements and landscapes on the continental shelf (by Björn Nilsson)
Over the edge: Heritage management and coastal erosion (by Tom Dawson)
Not just meat: The role of plants in paleonutritional reassessment (by Karen Hardy)
Boundary crossings and gendered bodies: The limits of the body - Gender trouble at the margins and in the centre (by Silvia Tomáąková and Bo Jensen)
Round Table: How to get published in archaeology (by Robin Skeates and
Estella Weiss-Krejci)
THE EUROPEAN ARCHAEOLOGIST, EUROPEAN ASSOCIATION OF ARCHAEOLOGISTS. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. 2012