“Rhythms from the distant past” by Luboš Chroustovský, Miloš Dvořáček, Nikolas Sabo et al.
Monday, July 04, 2022 08:00 – 09:30
Room A1 NEUSTUPNÝ
90 min | C08-13. A Critical Visualization of Archaeological TimeOrganiser: Uzma Z. Rizvi, Tasleem Abro
ID: 1013
What is the Archaeological Present?
Mudit Trivedi
ID: 1034
Time on the surface: Renewal and maintenance in a rammed-earth house at Maski
Mannat Johal
ID: 1344
Chronology of the Iron Age Cemeteries in District Chitral: Local perception/s vs Scientific Dating
Abdul Hameed
ID: 1307
Finding Mohenjo-daro: how GIS and 3D modelling can help reveal a complex urban legacy
Adam Green
ID: 1023
‘Mapping’ modalities of archaeological times – Building GIS of Mohenjo-Daro’s DK(G)-S mound
Pallavee Gokhale
ID: 1294
Visualizing Time as Spatial Analysis in MohenjoDaro
Uzma Rizvi
Monday, July 04, 2022 08:00 – 09:30
Room B1 BINFORD
90 min | B05-01. From Ethics to “New Ethics” – Theory and PraxisOrganiser: Marie Pyrgaki, Lilen Malugani Guillet, Talia Shay
ID: 1251
Burial Grounds old and modern: And death shall have no dominion
Lilen Malugani
ID: 1250
The contributions and disadvantages of the new materialistic approach :A contemporary case study of a cemetery in Israel
Talia Shay
ID: 1067
A new materialistic ontologicaly oriented approach: the case study of the Dispilio Neolithic lakeside settlement
Marie Pyrgaki
ID: 90
Challenging Academic Theories with Evidence-based Practice
Alice Kehoe
ID: 617
Researching the ontologies of the past. An approach based on the recursive ontological archaeology
Daniel Grecco Pacheco
Monday, July 04, 2022 08:00 – 09:30
Room B2 UCKO
90 min | D12-05. Repatriation, Restitution, and Reburial from a South American PerspectiveOrganiser: Jacinta Arthur, Patricia Ayala
ID: 240
COLLECTING, PATRIMONIALIZATION AND REPATRIATION OF THE ANCESTORS: THE CASE OF ATACAMEñO PEOPLE
Patricia Ayala
ID: 429
Epistemological Fissions: Indigenous repatriation in Chile
Jacinta Arthur de la Maza
ID: 1275
Reburial: projections of the Mapuche Museum of Cañete in the Lavkenche territory of Nawelbuta mapu mew.
Mónica Obreque Guirriman
ID: 1276
Restitution claims, academic debate and changing policies in Argentina
María Luz Endere
ID: 1299
Decolonising archaeological museums in Indigenous territories: application of indigenous customary rights in the care of human bodies and archaeological collections in the Atacama Desert, Chile.
Jimena Cruz
Monday, July 04, 2022 08:00 – 09:30
Room C2 CHILDE
90 | min A03-07. Archaeologies of pain and resistance: unveiling subaltern storiesOrganiser: Nicole Fuenzalida, Caroline Murta Lemos, Denise Neves Batista Costa
ID: 1296
Vidas sufridas, Clase, Género y Basura Prehispánica en La Sabana de Bogotá
Saúl Alberto Torres Orjuela
ID: 1413
Overcoming invisibility: an archaeological study of sex work in an incipient capitalist context (Pampa Union, Atacama Desert, Chile)
Fernanda Kalazich
ID: 816
Mental health Archaeology in Chile. A material perspective of Instituto Psiquiátrico Dr. José Horwitz Barak.
Javiera Letelier Cosmelli
ID: 1089
Reconstructive Archaeology of Borgoño Barracks (1977-1989). New approaches of dictatorships violence and politics return of material memory.
Nicole Fuenzalida
ID: 336
ARCHITECTING TERROR: A SENSORY STUDY OF THE OFFICIAL AND CLANDESTINE DETENTION CENTERS OF BRAZILIAN CIVIL-MILITARY DICTATORSHIP (1964-1985)
Caroline Murta Lemos
ID: 1125
A fight against oblivion: the role of Archaeology at the memorialization of the Departamento de Ordem Política e Social de Minas Gerais (DOPS/MG)
Denise Neves Batista Costa
Monday, July 04, 2022 08:00 – 09:30
Room C1 KERN
90 min | C07-05. From community engagement to engaged community: lessons from public archaeology for sustainable heritageOrganiser: József Laszlovszky, Petar Parvanov
ID: 760
Opposition, Criticism, and Integration: Research on the Protection of Chinese Large-scale Archaeological Sites and the Development of Local Communities
Dongdong WANG
ID: 771
For whom do we keep our monuments? Public involvement in monument designation.
José Schreurs
ID: 727
From Highway to Museum in situ: the Rescue Excavations and the Experience from Roman Villa Rustica near Blagoevgrad, Bulgaria
Zdravko Dimitrov
ID: 1353
Dolmens, a Cultural Powerhouse for a Local Population in Jordan
Kennett Schath
ID: 1004
Karantina Heritage Day – Archaeology as an educational tool for the traumatised youth of Beirut’s explosion
Alia Fares
ID: 1152
The Miseducation of Heritage: Closures of University Programs and the Changes for Cultural Heritage
Petar Parvanov
Monday, July 04, 2022 08:00 – 09:30
Foyer West GIMBUTAS
90 min | F15-17. Archaeology of meat – Meat as source of nutrition, status and identityOrganiser: Günther Karl Kunst, Krish Seetah, Jan Turek
ID: 1043
Stable isotopic investigations of the disappearance of domesticated pigs in the Okhotsk period (6-13 centuries AD), northern Japan
Takumi Tsutaya
ID: 1260
Meat as a sign of identity within Neolithic/Copper Age populations of Central Europe
Jan Turek
ID: 601
Changes in animal butchering technology and style from the Neolithic to the Iron Age in the southern Levant
Haskel Greenfield
ID: 1068
Meat consumption and processing of cattle on Roman rural settlements in northern France: socio-economic approach
Tarek OUESLATI
ID: 705
The (in)visible pastirma – cured meat and the animal bone record
Günther Karl Kunst
ID: 1297
Social hierarchy and food: the role of meat.
Krish Seetah
Monday, July 04, 2022 09:30 – 09:50
Room A1 NEUSTUPNÝ
20 min | Break
Monday, July 04, 2022 09:50 – 11:05
Room A1 NEUSTUPNÝ
75 min | Part 1/2: Z21-06. Remote sensing in the documentation, monitoring and research of archaeological landscapesOrganiser: Stephen Davis, Knut Rassmann
ID: 118
From Airborne Detection to 2D Mapping, 3D Modelling and the Virtual Reconstruction of Archaeological Heritage Revealed by Cropmarks. A Central European Project
Martin Gojda
ID: 374
A decade of remote sensing in the Brúna Bóinne World Heritage Site: History, discovery and application
Stephen Davis
ID: 671
Recording Changes to the Coastal Landscapes of Promontory Forts in Ireland and Wales
Edward Pollard
ID: 1054
Discovering new archaeological sites using Sentinel-2 imagery analyses
Marta Estanqueiro
Monday, July 04, 2022 09:50 – 11:05
Room B1 BINFORD
75 min | C09-02. Heritage Tourism: A boon or threat for Management & Sustainability of Heritage sitesOrganiser: Sergiu Musteata
ID: 1016
Cultural routes and their efficiency. Case study – Constanța County, Romania
Margareta Simina Stanc
ID: 1380
EMBRACING TOURISM WITH SUSTAINABILITY: AN ANALYSIS FROM INDIA
SUDESHNA BISWAS
ID: 1211
ARCHAEO-METALLURGICAL ANALYSIS FOR SUSTAINABILITY OF ANCIENT ARTEFACTS: A CHALLENGE FOR HERITAGE SITE MANAGEMENT
Anustup Chatterjee
ID: 294
Heritage Tourism and Sustainability- Bridging the gap with management tools
Asmita Basu Chatterjee
Monday, July 04, 2022 09:50 – 11:05
Room B2 UCKO
75 min | Part 1/2: H19-04. Fields, peoples and power: approaches to agrarian archaeologies of the preindustrial worldOrganiser: Jesús Fernández Fernández, Alejandra Korstanje, Gabriel Moshenska
ID: 1217
Charcoal, chemistry and mud: multi-proxy characterization of medieval agrarian soils. An example from Atlantic Europe (Asturias, NW Spain)
Jesús Fernández Fernández
ID: 72
Fields, women and work: Developing agrarian archaeologies in South Africa
Alex Schoeman
ID: 1019
Human-environment entanglement in the gold-belt territories of Iron Age southern Zambezia: Insights from ancient Mberengwa
Robert T Nyamushosho
ID: 1096
Seeing the Forest as More Than Just Trees: Amazonian Biotic Infrastructures as Indigenous Technology
Anna Browne Ribeiro
Monday, July 04, 2022 09:50 – 11:05
Room C2 CHILDE
75 min | Part 1/2: D11-01. Recent Issues and Future Possibilities of Public Archaeology and Anthropology on Indigenous People in East AsiaOrganiser: Maa-ling Chen, Hideyuki Ōnishi
ID: 96
Exploring the Inclusion of Cultural Landscapes in Ainu Heritage Management
Mayumi Okada
ID: 17
Issue and the Possibility of Managing Ancestral Own Land:Archaeological Cultural Heritage and Community Engagement of Kaushi, Taiwan
MAA-LING CHEN
ID: 625
Recent Trends in Community Engagement in the Utilization of Archaeological Resources in Hokkaido
Amanda Gomes
ID: 590
Archeological Sites / Museums / Taiwan’s Indigenous People
Soichiro Sunami
Monday, July 04, 2022 09:50 – 11:05
Room C1 KERN
75 min | Part 1/2: A01-07. From within: current approaches to the study of human/other-than-humans in (rock) art studiesOrganiser: Jo McDonald, Ana Paula Motta, Sven Ouzman, Martin Porr
ID: 1157
Fixing a Chimera: people, animals and things in representations of Upper Palaeolithic bodies
Chantal Conneller
ID: 356
Representing spirits: body painting, mask wearing and ritual performance in the kina ceremony of the Yagan/Yamana of Tierra del Fuego (Southern Southamerica)
Danae Fiore
ID: 361
Seeing animals: hunter-gatherer rock art in North-eastern Kimberley, Australia
Ana Paula Motta
ID: 365
Rock of Ages: Solidifying Human Identity Through Archaeology
Sven Ouzman
Monday, July 04, 2022 09:50 – 11:05
Foyer West GIMBUTAS
75 min | Part 1/2: F15-20. Social archaeologyChair: Martin Kuna
ID: 646
RECONSTRUCTION OF THE PAST KHIAMNIUNGAN NAGA SOCIETY -THROUGH RITUAL ACT OF HEADHUNTING.
YILOBEMO SANGMA
ID: 1194
Bodies of Healing: Objects and landscapes as catalysts of healing in Costal communities of western India
Durga Kale
ID: 802
Mask: The Face of Folk Culture. With special reference to Chamoli, Uttarakhand.
Medha Bhatt
ID: 62
Dwellers of the past: Through the rock Art in Ladakh, India
Sonam Dolma
Monday, July 04, 2022 09:50 – 11:05
Lounge MONTELIUS (only virtual sessions)
75 min | C07-06. Recipes for community-engaged art and archaeology (Round table)Organiser: Ilona Bausch, Yasuyuki Yoshida
ID: 741
Clashing perspectives on art and archaeology?
Ilona Bausch
ID: 190
Art and archaeology beyond fun
Monique Van den Dries
ID: 160
Community engaged with art and archaeology – defining a ‘common’
Nicolas Zorzin
ID: 314
Scattered Communities and Archaeological Heritage
Yasuyuki Yoshida
ID: 428
Looking for an “art” for community-engaged art and archaeology
Sahoko Aki
Monday, July 04, 2022 11:05 – 11:25
Room 1
20 min | Break
Monday, July 04, 2022 11:25 – 12:55
Room A1 NEUSTUPNÝ
90 min | Part 2/2: Z21-06. Remote sensing in the documentation, monitoring and research of archaeological landscapesOrganiser: Stephen Davis, Knut Rassmann
ID: 1084
Big data and the search for early medieval coastal fortresses across northern Europe
Søren M. Kristiansen
ID: 1183
Unlocking Late-Antique and Early-Islamic al-Ḥīra (Iraq) – multi-method remote sensing as a tool for understanding and mapping settlement landscapes
Martin Gussone
ID: 1228
Geographic Information System Assessment of the Cultural Landscape of Calerizo de Cáceres in the Middle Pleistocene.
Akinbowale Akintayo
ID: 1238
Under the Eternal Blue Sky. Remote sensing methods in the research of Khitan period sites in Mongolia.
Katalin Tolnai
ID: 451
A MaxEnt predictive model for palaeontological sites in the Siwalik Hills: A case study from the Pinjore Formation of the Siwalik Hills north of Chandigarh, northern India
Anubhav Preet Kaur
Monday, July 04, 2022 11:25 – 12:55
Room B1 BINFORD
90 min | Part 1/2: F15-21. Artefactual ArchaeologyChair: Timothy Taylor
ID: 1370
New Palaeolithic Assemblages from the Arid Core of the Thar Desert, India
Ravindra Devra
ID: 1236
The Palaeolithic assemblages of Lower Son Valley with special reference to Indian Upper Palaeolithic, Uttar Pradesh, India
Shashi Bhushan
ID: 1137
Hole and chipping of ancient instruments
Manami Hasegawa
ID: 1245
Values-led Design Tools for Archaeological Practice
Francesca Dolcetti
ID: 1391
Personal ornaments of the Neolithic Mariupol type cemeteries
Nataliia Mykhailova
Monday, July 04, 2022 11:25 – 12:55
Room B2 UCKO
90 min | Part 2/2: H19-04. Fields, peoples and power: approaches to agrarian archaeologies of the preindustrial worldOrganiser: Jesús Fernández Fernández, Alejandra Korstanje, Gabriel Moshenska
ID: 725
Fields, water and the Inka Empire. Prehispanic agricultural practices in the highlands of the Atacama desert (Rio Salado basin, Northern Chile)
César Parcero-Oubiña
ID: 1126
Analyzing social and political changes throughout the terrace landscapes in Central Andes (Peru). Agrarian Archaeology in the Valley of Sondondo, Peru.
Patricia Aparicio Martínez
ID: 1160
Horticultural practices. An approach to their study at LTC1 and CDLPB archaeological sites (Upper Delta of the Paraná River, Entre Ríos, Argentina) based on the analysis of biosiliceous microremains.
María de los Milagros Colobig
ID: 1354
Agronomic and water conditions for maize prehispanic agriculture in the Atacama desert inferred by stable oxygen isotopes (δ18O)
Ale Vidal Elgueta
ID: 1398
Understanding pre-Hispanic agrarian landscapes in Neotropical grasslands and forests: Multi-proxy approaches to assessing Indigenous anthropogenic landscapes
Veronica Zuccarelli Freire
Monday, July 04, 2022 11:25 – 12:55
Room C2 CHILDE
90 min | Part 2/2: D11-01. Recent Issues and Future Possibilities of Public Archaeology and Anthropology on Indigenous People in East AsiaOrganiser: Maa-ling Chen, Hideyuki Ōnishi
ID: 201
Ainu Historical Heritage as Common Property during Multi-Ethnicity in Local Community
Hideyuki ŌNISHI
ID: 1285
Participating the Bunun’s Roots-seeking Expeditions in the Lakulaku River Basin of Taiwan as a Practice of Indigenous Archaeology
Chieh-fu Jeff Cheng
ID: 1247
Understanding Indigenous Past: Indigenous Participation to Archaeological Practices.
Hirofumi KATO
ID: 300
Nenpaku poncep e=pa ya? Exploring Human-Fish Interactions of Ancestral and Current Ainu through Fish Ancient DNA and community knowledge
Yuka Shichiza
ID: 1264
Abalone Ritual Remains in Site Hamanaka 2 — A new possibility for Contribution to Ainu’s Cultural Revitalization
Chung Yu Liu
ID: 456
Cosmology and Star Lore among the Hokkaido Ainu and its implication to Public Archaeology.
Akira Goto
Monday, July 04, 2022 11:25 – 12:55
Room C1 KERN
90 min | Part 2/2: A01-07. From within: current approaches to the study of human/other-than-humans in (rock) art studiesOrganiser: Jo McDonald, Ana Paula Motta, Sven Ouzman, Martin Porr
ID: 1269
Grass prints and botanical encounters – a unique record of forager-plant relationships in the rock art of Balanggarra Country, East Kimberley
Emily Grey
ID: 355
Affective Seas, Modes of Being and Rock Art in the Pacific: A Comparison Between Rapa Nui (Easter Island) and the coast of the Atacama Desert
Felipe Armstrong
ID: 789
A Kumuã Perspective on the Interontology of Rock Art: Non – Human Beings and Ancestors Engaged with Sentient Rock Art Places in Northwest Amazonia, Brazil
Raoni Valle
ID: 1140
Exploring half human half animal beings in Levantine rock art (Mediterranean Iberian peninsula)
Ines Domingo
ID: 724
Social Beings – Exploring Identities through Figural Art of Palaeolithic Europe and North European Rock Art
Liliana Janik
ID: 1227
Beyond human bodies and boundaries.
Catalina Navarro
Monday, July 04, 2022 11:25 – 12:55
Foyer West GIMBUTAS
90 min | Part 2/2: F15-20. Social archaeologyChair: Martin Kuna
ID: 1292
Archaeological Statistical Study on Gender Imbalance in Population with Chinese Chu tomb of Eastern Zhou Dynasty
LAN DINA
ID: 1345
Mulieres in Moesia Inferior: identity and ethnicity
Roxana-Gabriela Curca
ID: 515
Naga- Ahom Relationship: Lenses from Literary text, Oral traditions and Archaeology
Aokumla Walling
ID: 1280
The social importance of Chinese Porcelain in Early Modern Portugal (16th–18th century)
Joel Santos
ID: 1374
The Ottoman households (16th – 17th century) in the fortress of Timișoara, Romania
Adriana Gașpar
ID: 88
The Tejar de San Bernabé as a transforming element of society in Cartagena de Indias (Colombia) during the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries.
Laura Victoria Baéz Santos
Monday, July 04, 2022 11:25 – 12:55
Lounge MONTELIUS (only virtual sessions)
90 min | E14-04. Cultural interactions across the Bay of Bengal and beyondOrganiser: Wijerathne Bohingamuwa, Kaushik Gangopadhyay, Coline Lefranq, Selvakumar Veeraswamy
ID: 580
The archaeological site of Mahasthangarh in Bangladesh: assessment and perspectives in the framework of the ERC project – DHARMA
Coline Lefrancq
ID: 613
A study on recently discovered ceramic assemblages from the mudflats located on the Bay of Bengal coastline ,West Bengal India;Questioning the South- East Asian connectiont
Ahana Ghosh
ID: 745
Sri Lanka’s interactions across the Bay of Bengal from the middle of the first millennium BCE to the middle of the 13th century CE
Wijerathne Bohingamuwa
ID: 769
A View from the Across the Bay: A comparative study of Historical Period Pottery from Myanmar and India.
Kaushik Gangopadhyay
ID: 801
Situating ‘Saraswati’ in the maritime network: An overview of the historical and cultural linkages
Sharmistha Chatterjee
ID: 813
Early Historic ports of the Tamil Nadu Coast and the Foreland-Hinterland Networks of the Indian Ocean
Veerasamy Selvakumar
ID: 1282
Recent discoveries made by the French Archaeological Mission in Peninsular Thailand and Myanmar on the pottery of “Indian” origin or of “Indian” influence
Coline Lefrancq
Monday, July 04, 2022 12:55 – 14:15
Room A1 NEUSTUPNÝ
80 min | Break
Monday, July 04, 2022 14:15 – 15:45
Room A1 NEUSTUPNÝ
90 min | Part 1/2: WAC Plenary #1: The special plenary on the Russian invasion of Ukraine
ID: 1426
Official inauguration speech by H. E. Mr. Yevhen Perebyinis (Ambassador of Ukraine in the Czech Republic)
ID: 1427
Archeological heritage and the war: Ukrainian realities / Археологічна спадщина та війна: Українські реалії
Sergey Telizhenko
ID: 1428
Damage and destruction of cultural heritage sites of Ukraine due to the aggression of the Russian Federation. Current information / Пошкодження та руйнування об’єктів культурної спадщини України внаслідок агресії Російської Федерації. Актуальна інформація
Larysa Vynogrodska
ID: 1448
Archaeological heritage in the Odesa region in the time of full-scale war/ Археологічна спадщина у Одеській області у часи повномасштабної війни
Monument of National Significance “Kamyanska Sich”
Anatoly Volkov
ID: 1429
The Upper Palaeolithic of Donbass and war in Ukraine / Верхній палеоліт Донбасу і війна в Україні
Olexandra OlexandrIvna Krotova
ID: 1430
Archaeological and cultural heritage of the Zaporozhye region in time of war / Археологічна та культурна спадщина Запорізької області у воєнний час
Oleg Tuboltsev
Monday, July 04, 2022 14:15 – 15:45
Room B1 BINFORD
90 min | Part 2/2: F15-21. Artefactual ArchaeologyChair: Timothy Taylor
ID: 292
A study on the heated phenomenon in Chinese ancient jade artifacts
Yi Bao
ID: 177
Redefining tool and tool use
Jayashree Mazumder
ID: 319
Style, Symbol and creativity
Sima Yadollahi
ID: 843
Toss a coin
Gerit Schwenzer
ID: 1252
Morpho-technological analysis of lithic tools from Checua, a hunter-gatherer site at Sabana de Bogotá, Colombia, Northern South America
Diego Alejandro Medrano Acosta
Monday, July 04, 2022 14:15 – 15:45
Room B2 UCKO
90 min | C07-02. Straight talk: What does and what does not constitute community archaeology? (Round table)Organiser: Peter Schmidt, Jagath Weersinghe
ID: 216
Corporations, Commerce, Corruption, and Community Archaeology
K. Anne Pyburn
ID: 1402
Straight Talk: What does and does not constitute community archaeology
Uzma Rizvi
ID: 42
Epistemic Humility: What its Practice Means for Community Archaeology and Heritage
Peter Schmidt
Monday, July 04, 2022 14:15 – 15:45
Room C2 CHILDE
90 min | Part 1/3: F16-06. Cave Ontologies: Why are caves significant to humans?Organiser: Kathryn Arthur, Ran Barkai
ID: 1082
Thinking with caves: describing the terms in which past understandings of the world are grounded
Dimitrij Mlekuz Vrhovnik
ID: 1052
Temporality and atemporality in caves
Robin Skeates
ID: 1075
Cave Use by Chimpanzees and other Nonhuman Primates: Potential Insight for Human Evolution
Jill Pruetz
ID: 1033
Cave intimacies: earth, wind and fire in the Paleolithic
Yafit Kedar
ID: 1071
Into the dark side: speleological exploration of the caves during the Upper Palaeolithic, what for?
Garate Diego
Monday, July 04, 2022 14:15 – 15:45
Room C1 KERN
90 min | Part 1/2: F15-12. Crafting identities through ceramic practice. Global histories on the origins of pottery technology among foragersOrganiser: Giulia D’Ercole, Elena A. A. Garcea, Ladislav Varadzin, Lenka Varadzinová Suková
ID: 1168
Terminal Pleistocene adoption of pottery and signatures of Neolithic in southern Japan
Fumie Iizuka
ID: 34
Maritime Expansion, Pottery Technology, and Crafting Identities: the emergence and use of pottery in early Neolithic Korea and adjacent Russian Far East
Jangsuk Kim
ID: 185
Ceramisation of hunter-gatherers in north-central Europe
Marek Nowak
ID: 112
Why pottery? – an eastern Fennoscandian view on the beginning of ceramics production
Ari-Pekka Junno
ID: 1060
Patterns of pottery use by hunter-gatherer-fishers in Eurasia: Reassessing the ‘aquatic Neolithic’ concept.
Alexandre Lucquin
Monday, July 04, 2022 14:15 – 15:45
Foyer West GIMBUTAS
90 min | Part 1/2: H19-10. The human – environment conundrum in palaeoanthropology through the integration of high-resolution multi-proxy techniquesOrganiser: Rosa Maria Albert, Irene Esteban, Sally Hoare
ID: 1350
Human Occupation of Okomu Forest Reserve: a view from ecological anthropology
Emuobosa Akpo ORIJEMIE
ID: 1119
Clarifying the stratigraphic boundary between Member 4 and Member 5 of the Sterkfontein Caves, South Africa: A three-dimensional spatial analysis of hominin fossils and stone tools
Maryke Horn
ID: 1094
Reconstructing highland hominin occupation landscapes by using siliceous microremains, geochemical magnetic and mineralogical analyses of core material from Kilombe Caldera (Kenya)
Rosa Maria Albert
ID: 1083
A multi-proxy approach examines 1.1 to 0.5 Ma palaeoenvironmental changes at Kilombe, Kenya
Sally Hoare
Monday, July 04, 2022 15:45 – 16:05
Room A1 NEUSTUPNÝ
20 min | Break
Monday, July 04, 2022 16:05 – 17:05
Room A1 NEUSTUPNÝ
60 min | Part 2/2: WAC Plenary #1: The special plenary on the Russian invasion of Ukraine
ID: 1431
Kamyana Mohyla archaeological site in the territory occupied by Russians / Археологічний комплекс Кам’яна Могила на окупованій росією території
Dmytro Kiosak
ID: 1432
Statistical report of destroyed and damaged cultural and historical heritage sites as of June 21, 2022 / Статистичний звіт зруйнованих та пошкоджених обєктів культурної та історичної спадщини станом на 21.06.2022
Roman Liubun
ID: 1433
Activities of the historical and cultural reserve “Ancient Plisnesk” in the conditions of Russian military invasion (February–June 2022) / Діяльність історико-культурного заповідника «Давній Пліснеськ» в умовах російського військового вторгнення (лютий-червень 2022 р.)
Oleksandr DidykOksana Jakubowska
ID: 1434
Heritage Emergency Response Initiative (HERI) / Штаб порятунку спадщини
Vasyl Rozhko
Monday, July 04, 2022 16:05 – 17:05
Room B1 BINFORD
60 min | Part 1/2: C08-02. Changing heritage policy and practice in the Middle East in an age of neoliberalismOrganiser: Robin Skeates, Shatha Abu-Khafajah
ID: 634
Archaeological Heritage Protection through Public Engagement: The Case of Palestine
Iman Saca
ID: 497
Off the Map: Spatializing Access to Memory in Beitunia, Palestine
Adam Lubitz
ID: 630
Flexi-local: The advantages of being both local and outsider within contemporary heritage management in Jordan
Allison Mickel
Monday, July 04, 2022 16:05 – 17:05
Room B2 UCKO
60 min | Part 1/2: A02-05. Ethnoarchaeology: From Research Tool to Foundational Archaeological EpistemologyOrganiser: Sharada V. Channarayapatna, Alok Kumar Kanungo, Jordan Ralph
ID: 1204
Between the universal and the particular – New perspectives to understanding past and present through ethnoarchaeology
Shikharani Sabnis
ID: 214
Joint-less Glass Bangles in India: An Ancient Indian Knowledge System
Alok Kumar Kanungo
Monday, July 04, 2022 16:05 – 17:05
Room C2 CHILDE
60 min | Part 2/3: F16-06. Cave Ontologies: Why are caves significant to humans?Organiser: Kathryn Arthur, Ran Barkai
ID: 1153
Further underground, a ‘palaeospeleology’ during Middle and Late Palaeolithic
Jacques JAUBERT
ID: 1138
Hunter-gatherer interactions with the Early Pottery-producing cave sites of Late Pleistocene South China
David J. Cohen
ID: 1150
Touching the ancestors- usage of deep caves for ritual in prehistoric Southern Levant
Michael Freikman
ID: 1010
Ancient Greek cave cults and the archaeology of senses
Yulia Ustinova
Monday, July 04, 2022 16:05 – 17:05
Room C1 KERN
60 min | Part 2/2: F15-12. Crafting identities through ceramic practice. Global histories on the origins of pottery technology among foragersOrganiser: Giulia D’Ercole, Elena A. A. Garcea, Ladislav Varadzin, Lenka Varadzinová Suková
ID: 1196
Between Africa and Asia: the emergence of pottery in the Southern Levant (Late 7th millennium cal. BC)
Julien VIEUGUE
ID: 1283
Four thousand years of pottery technology by foragers in Jebel Sabaloka, Middle Nile Valley (Sudan)
Elena A.A. Garcea
ID: 608
The oldest Pottery Production in Central Sahara: a view from the Takarkori rockshelter and the Tadrart Acacus.
Rocco Rotunno
ID: 288
The origin of ceramic diversity in the Southwestern Amazon
Francisco Pugliese
Monday, July 04, 2022 16:05 – 17:05
Foyer West GIMBUTAS
60 min | Part 2/2: H19-10. The human – environment conundrum in palaeoanthropology through the integration of high-resolution multi-proxy techniquesOrganiser: Rosa Maria Albert, Irene Esteban, Sally Hoare
ID: 1134
Inferring paleo-lake system phases using micromorphology at Wonderwerk Cave, South Africa
Ailidh Hathway
ID: 1111
Geoarchaeology and paleoecology of the Middle-to-Later Stone Age sites of Lovedale and Damvlei, Free State, South Africa
Kristen Wroth
ID: 1103
Evaluating Last Interglacial climate variability and modern humans’ flora exploitation on the Cape south coast of South Africa through the integration of phytolith and leaf-wax data
Irene Esteban
ID: 1101
Stable isotope study of Pleistocene mammalian teeth from western and central India: Preliminary results and palaeoanthropological implications
Shashi Bhushan
Monday, July 04, 2022 17:05 – 17:25
Room A1 NEUSTUPNÝ
20 min | Break
Monday, July 04, 2022 17:25 – 18:40
Room A1 NEUSTUPNÝ
75 min | Z21-15. The collapse of ancient societiesOrganiser: Kuei-chen Lin, Junko Uchida
ID: 1242
ITLE Factors Contributing to Rise and fall of Assyria, Urartu, and Manna in Ancient Near EastBased on Historical Studies and Archaeological Evidence
Mahta Sheikhi
ID: 818
Re-examination of the Han conquest and the “collapse” of the indigenous societies in Han’s southern frontiers during the first millennium BCE
Wengcheong Lam
ID: 213
Destruction of Monumental Structures during Early Medieval Eastern India Period
Anil Kumar
ID: 1271
Decline of the Late Shang Authority
Junko Uchida
ID: 1274
The collapse of Sanxingdui society and its resilience
Kuei-chen Lin
Monday, July 04, 2022 17:25 – 18:40
Room B1 BINFORD
75 min | Part 2/2: C08-02. Changing heritage policy and practice in the Middle East in an age of neoliberalismOrganiser: Robin Skeates, Shatha Abu-Khafajah
ID: 629
Reflections on Attempting to Transform Museum Education in Jordan
Robin Skeates
ID: 632
The impact of a small scale organisation in triggering changes at the national level: the case study of Sela for Training and Protection of Heritage in Jordan
Maria Elena Ronza
ID: 633
Managing Preventive Conservation in Time of Crises
Fatma Marii
ID: 635
Museums as places of non-formal learning
Mohammad Alqaisi
ID: 1401
The development regime and abjection by heritage
Ian Simpson
Monday, July 04, 2022 17:25 – 18:40
Room B2 UCKO
75 min | Part 2/2: A02-05. Ethnoarchaeology: From Research Tool to Foundational Archaeological EpistemologyOrganiser: Sharada V. Channarayapatna, Alok Kumar Kanungo, Jordan Ralph
ID: 326
An ethnoarchaeological study of Dholavira worked bone assemblage through experimental reconstruction and use-wear analyses
Sharada Channarayapatna
ID: 538
Ethnoarchaeological study and archaeometric analysis of raw materials and finished objects: production processes at a traditional ceramic workshop in Huizachal, San Luis Potosí, Mexico
Niklas Schulze
ID: 1213
The death of a potter Archaeological ethnography and funerary rituals in an Andean community of potters in southern Bolivia
Florencia Avila
ID: 805
Ethnoarchaeology of Pottery Traditions in Southern Jos Plateau, Nigeria
Macham Mangut
ID: 231
Stone Alignments in Prehistoric Middle Ganga Plain: An Ethnoarchaeological Interpretation
Shahida Ansari
Monday, July 04, 2022 17:25 – 18:40
Room C2 CHILDE
75 min | Part 3/3: F16-06. Cave Ontologies: Why are caves significant to humans?Organiser: Kathryn Arthur, Ran Barkai
ID: 1012
Death and Caves among the Ancestral Maya
Lisa Lucero
ID: 1136
The Thingness of Caves: Entanglement and Untying among the Ancient Maya
Holley Moyes
ID: 1216
Entheogens in Caves: Ontological interactions in Pinwheel Cave, California
David Robinson
ID: 1062
Sheltering Indigenous Ontologies: Caves of the Ethiopian Rift Valley
Kathryn Weedman Arthur
Monday, July 04, 2022 17:25 – 18:40
Room C1 KERN
75 min | F15-13. Vernacular & Indigenous Material Culture and Architecture – Tracing the Homogeneity and DiversityOrganiser: Durga Basu, Sergiu Musteata
ID: 149
Legacy of Harappan Ceramics in Present day Haryana: An Ethnological Study
Banani Bhattacharyya
ID: 1287
Ideology and Archaeology of Fountain Slabs from Western Himalayas
Renu Thakur
ID: 295
The Vernacular Architecture of Assam- A Search for Climate Responsive Ethnic Houses and Construction technique
Dr. Durga Basu
ID: 296
Tangible & Intangible cultural heritage of the Indigenous Community of the Santhals – challenges to sustainable heritage frame work
Asmita Basu Chatterjee
ID: 445
Indigenous Iron Smelting Techniques of Asur-An Ethnic Group of Jharkhand
Debsmita Bonu
Monday, July 04, 2022 17:25 – 18:40
Foyer West GIMBUTAS
75 min | F15-04. Children, Personhood and the Archaeology of IdentityOrganiser: Jane Baxter, April Nowell
ID: 53
Ice Age “Teens” and the Archaeology of Identity
April Nowell
ID: 524
Child Kings in Classic Maya History
Traci Ardren
ID: 842
Who is Who?
Gerit Schwenzer
ID: 32
Questioning Understandings of Childhood in the Archaeology of Identity
Jane Baxter
Monday, July 04, 2022 17:25 – 18:40
Lounge MONTELIUS (only virtual sessions)
75 min | B06-04. Decolonization of Classics and Classical ArchaeologyChair: Charina Knutson
ID: 642
From the Depths: Teaching the History of Classical Archaeology through Archives
Annelies Van de Ven
ID: 1077
Decolonizing Archaeological Methods
Rita Ujunwa Onah
ID: 1164
Coloniality and the Classics: Imperial Mythos in British Perceptions of the Past
Kulvinder Nagre
ID: 1341
Interdisciplinary perspectives and research: a stumbling block for “the classical” classicists?
Torill Christine Lindstrøm
Tuesday, July 05, 2022 08:00 – 09:30
Room A1 NEUSTUPNÝ
90 min | D11-03. Global perspectives on decolonising rock art knowledgeOrganiser: Raoni Valle, Leslie F. Zubieta Calvert
ID: 1093
Reframing Rock Art Knowledge though ‘Rewriting the History of Humanity’, ‘Decolonizing Knowledge’, and ‘Countering the Enclosure of the Knowledge Commons’
David Turnbull
ID: 283
Phenomenological categories and decolonization in Peruvian rock research
Gori-Tumi Echevarría López
ID: 776
Padeo Masirĕ – Inter-epistemic reciprocity and respect between Indigenous and Western rock art researchers in Brazilian Amazonia.
Raoni Valle
ID: 284
Tsikwaye: Constructing Collaborative Narratives of the Role of a Rock Art Mesa in Defining Puebloan History
Chester Liwosz
ID: 785
Achievements and difficulties: Lessons in collaborative rock art research in the Mixe region of Oaxaca, Mexico.
Leslie F. Zubieta
ID: 581
Decolonising history through rock art: Indigenous knowledge and modern art
Andrzej Rozwadowski
Tuesday, July 05, 2022 08:00 – 09:30
Room B1 BINFORD
90 min | B06-01. Thirty years on: has the Vermillion Accord steered change?Organiser: Wendy Black, Morongwa Mosothwane
ID: 1363
Thirty years on: the Vermilion Accord in the third world countries
Wendy Black
ID: 1329
After Thirty Years – What Change Has Come and What is Still to be Done
Helen Robbins
ID: 1306
The Vermillion Accord and the Willandra Lakes World Heritage Area Ancestral Remains Collection: A Tragedy in Three Acts.
Doug Williams
ID: 1314
Striving to do better: changing museum practice related to human remains collections in South Africa.
Wendy Black
ID: 408
ETHICS AND HUMAN REMAINS MANAGEMENT IN A PROVINCIAL MUSEUM IN THE EASTERN CAPE, SOUTH AFRICA
Celeste Booth
ID: 865
Archaeology and memory in Cape Town: Prestwich Street Burial Memorial as a case study
Robyn Humphreys
Tuesday, July 05, 2022 08:00 – 09:30
Room B2 UCKO
90 min | Part 1/3: H19-11. Archaeology of Environment and Human CultureChair: Petr Pokorný, Matthew Walls
ID: 1058
Multi-scalar methods reveal invisible grave goods and burial rituals in a Viking Age-chamber grave
Søren M. Kristiansen
ID: 1027
FARMING BEGINNING IN SOUTHWESTERN TRANSYLVANIA (ROMANIA): ANIMALS REMAINS AND PHYTOLITHS FROM EARLY NEOLITHIC SITES IN MURES VALLEY
Margareta Simina Stanc
ID: 1142
DIET AND ZOOTHERAPY: AN INSIGHT FROM THE FIERCE HUNTERS OF IKIJA, SOUTH-WESTERN NIGERIA
Moses Akogun
ID: 1038
Integrating Decolonial Approaches into Historical Ecology: Studies of Long-term Human-Environmental Dialectics in Previously Colonized Territories
Sandra Oseguera
ID: 218
Situating archaeogenetics.
Kristian Kristiansen
ID: 1243
Traditionally Adept: Debunking Management Myths and Women’s Response to Climate Change In Nigeria.
Chioma Vivian Ngonadi
Tuesday, July 05, 2022 08:00 – 09:30
Room C2 CHILDE
90 min | Part 1/3: F15-19. Archaeology of Material Culture, Art, Landscape and SettlementChair: Luboš Chroustovský, Petr Krištuf
90 min | Part 1/2: A03-06. Archaeologies of Contemporary (Political) Global SettingsOrganiser: Dante Angelo, Andrés Zarankin
ID: 572
The “Serpent’s Egg” and the Challenges of an Archeology of Repression and Resistance in South America
Andres Zarankin
ID: 595
Material Culture and Politics: Social movements and Repression in Temuco, Chile during the Latin American Spring
Henrik B. Lindskoug
ID: 1130
Catastrophic Memories: Wading Through Politics of Memory, Monumentalization, and Nationalism
Dante Angelo
ID: 1190
Making consensus in contemporary Indigenous politics: archaeological ethnography of heritage-triggered conflicts and development interventions in the southcentral Andes
Francesco Orlandi
ID: 1346
Amazonian Archaeology of the Present: The political dimension of the discourses
Denise Gomes
Tuesday, July 05, 2022 08:00 – 09:30
Foyer West GIMBUTAS
90 min | E13-03. Where to from here? Decolonising historical archaeology in practice and theoryOrganiser: Dores Cruz, Natalie Swanepoel
ID: 571
Archeo-becoming, Zarankin-centrism and contaminated presents; decolonising traditional writing frameworks
Andres Zarankin
ID: 83
An Historical Archaeology of Minstrelsy
Seth Mallios
ID: 525
Re-interpreting the socio-spatial aspects of urbanism in East Africa
Monika Baumanova
ID: 236
Pre-colonial Names, Identities and Material Culture: New perspectives from Insiza cluster Khami-phase sites, south-western Zimbabwe
Lesley Hatipone Machiridza
ID: 665
Ways of being: time and narratives of ancestors in African historical archaeology
Natalie Swanepoel
Tuesday, July 05, 2022 08:00 – 18:55
Poster section
Poster viewing
Tuesday, July 05, 2022 09:30 – 09:50
Room A1 NEUSTUPNÝ
20 min | Break
Tuesday, July 05, 2022 09:50 – 10:45
Room A1 NEUSTUPNÝ
75 min | A04-01. Lightning Strike Wakes Archaeologists and they Challenge Colonial-Indigenous Master Narratives!Organiser: Kathryn Weedman Arthur
ID: 108
Challenging the authority of archaeological science: Reclaiming stone-tool technological processes as Indigenous lifecycle knowledge
Kathryn Weedman Arthur
ID: 478
Navigating a Changing World: Maintenance of Indigenous Practices of Conflict in the Lower Colorado River BasinSpeakers
Joseph Curran
ID: 619
Breaking Social Complexity Models’ Hold on Indigenous Pasts and Presents
Dawn M. Rutecki
ID: 1091
The Ekuanitshit archaeological research program and the potentiality of indigenous archaeologies in northeaster Canada
Jean-Christophe Ouellet
Tuesday, July 05, 2022 09:50 – 11:05
Room B1 BINFORD
75 min | C09-01. Community Archaeology and Management of heritage Sites and MuseumsChair: Pavel Vařeka
ID: 722
The protection of heritage and the civil protection´s mechanisms
Isber Sabrine
ID: 1105
Managing heritage with and without local communities: A case study from El-Kurru, northern Sudan
Geoff Emberling
ID: 1207
Community and heritages in the Maya area: A case of Copán Ruinas, Honduras
Makiha GOKITA
ID: 1214
BACK TO OURS. Examples of heritage management from the communities in Bolivia
Vanessa Calvimontes Díaz
Tuesday, July 05, 2022 09:50 – 11:05
Room B2 UCKO
75 min | Part 2/3: H19-11. Archaeology of Environment and Human CultureChair: Petr Pokorný, Matthew Walls
ID: 1203
Eco friendly but not archaeology friendly??? Role of bamboo among the Karbi of West Karbi Anglong in North East India
Shikharani Sabnis
ID: 1412
Comparing Scales of Collective Action: Surface Water, Sustainable Management, and the Deep History of South Asia
Adam Green
ID: 1080
In the Land of Rain Gods. Studies on pre-Hispanic Water Management System in Central Mexico on the Example of Tetzcotzinco
Daniel Prusaczyk
ID: 1262
Playgrounds in Gardens of Birjand
Saman Farzin
ID: 742
Rome and the Tiber: Landscape construction and transformation in Antiquity
Maria del Carmen Moreno Escobar
Tuesday, July 05, 2022 09:50 – 11:05
Room C2 CHILDE
75 min | Part 2/3: F15-19. Archaeology of Material Culture, Art, Landscape and SettlementChair: Luboš Chroustovský, Petr Krištuf
ID: 1086
The Extraterritorial Transit Ports Phenomenon of China’s Ceramic Trade in the 9th-10th Centuries: Focusing on Southeast Asia
Kunpeng Xiang
ID: 368
ORAL TRADITION VS SCIENCE “THE PROVENANCE OF SUNGBO’S MOAT IN SOUTHWESTERN NIGERIA
AHMED SULAIMAN
ID: 492
Classification of the late and post Achaemenid Ridged Storage Jar
Takuro Adachi
ID: 767
MEDIEVAL ARCHAEOLOGY IN SOUTH ASIA: AN ARCHAEOLOGICAL STUDY OF MUGHAL LESSER KNOWN MONUMENTS AT AGRA
MANVENDRA KUMAR PUNDHIR
ID: 626
AJAYGARH FORT: AN ARCHAEOLOGICAL SURVEY
VINOD KUMAR SINGH
Tuesday, July 05, 2022 09:50 – 11:05
Room C1 KERN
75 min | Part 2/2: A03-06. Archaeologies of Contemporary (Political) Global SettingsOrganiser: Dante Angelo, Andrés Zarankin
ID: 1161
The global within the local: conflict heritage as hyperobject
Esther Breithoff
ID: 1302
ARCHAEOLOGY OF COPPER AND LITHIUM MINING: POSTINDUSTRIAL LANDSCAPES IN THE ATACAMA DESERT, CHILE
Valentina Figueroa
ID: 153
Borderlines: The Archaeology of Contemporary Borders
Randall McGuire
ID: 1222
Dialogues of COVID: Material traces, political undertones, and internal conversations
Kelly Britt
Tuesday, July 05, 2022 09:50 – 11:05
Foyer West GIMBUTAS
75 min | B05-03. Indigenous Peoples and New Techniques for Provenance Research: Opportunities, Challenges and RisksOrganiser: Edward Halealoha Ayau, Lyndon Ormond-Parker, Paul Turnbull
ID: 52
Prehistoric People and Practices at Richardson’s Hammock Burial Mound, Northwest Florida, USA
Nancy Marie White
ID: 591
Bringing the ancestors home: a multi-proxy isotope and genomic approach for the repatriation of unprovenanced ancestral remains to Victorian Aboriginal communities
Rodney Carter
Tuesday, July 05, 2022 11:05 – 11:25
Room A1 NEUSTUPNÝ
20 min | Break
Tuesday, July 05, 2022 11:25 – 12:55
— Choose —
90 min | Z21-14. Environmental Archaeology of Ancient Complex Societies in East AsiaOrganiser: Shinya Shoda
Tuesday, July 05, 2022 11:25 – 12:55
Room A1 NEUSTUPNÝ
90 min | Part 1/2: F16-03. Community archaeology: Decolonizing archaeological practices to empower descendant communitiesOrganiser: Tanambelo Rasolondrainy, Nancy Rushohora, Valence Silayo
ID: 421
Imagining Futures through Un/Archived Pasts
Nancy Rushohora
ID: 81
Decolonizing archaeological practices in southwest Madagascar: The Vezo Ecological Knowledge Exchange (VEKE).
Tanambelo Rasolondrainy
ID: 461
Alice in wonderland: Cultural Mapping of the Duncan-Kemp archive on Mithaka Country, Far South West Queensland, Australia
Joshua Gorringe
ID: 420
Monumental landscapes: Preservation of the Chagga sacred and ritual sites
Valence SILAYO
ID: 747
Towards decolonising archaeological practices: the experiences at Amara West, Sudan
Tomomi Fushiya
Tuesday, July 05, 2022 11:25 – 12:55
Room B1 BINFORD
90 min | Z21-16. South Asia and the World: Tackling the big archaeological questions through South Asian evidencesOrganiser: Francesc Conesa, Adam Green, Akash Srinivas, Nupur Tiwari
ID: 1102
Acheulean variability in the Central Narmada Valley (CNV), India
Vivek Singh
ID: 412
Reading between the lines: What makes the South Asian Middle Palaeolithic, ‘Middle Palaeolithic’?
Akash Srinivas
ID: 692
IN SITU MICROLITHS IN A DATED LATE PLEISTOCENE CONTEXT AND ASSOCIATED ROCK ART AT CHIKLI, MADHYA PRADESH
Nupur Tiwari
ID: 1149
“My Buddha has Arrived”; Sacred landscape, Cultural Performances and Envisioning the Enigma of Relics: An Ethnographic Case Study of Relic Processions at Sarnath, Varanasi and Kandy, Sri Lanka
Tishyarakshita S Nagarkar
ID: 1212
Lands of change: Re-centering the maritime landscape in South Asia through phenomenology
Durga Kale
ID: 274
From Basel Mission to Mangalore Tiles: new archaeological evidence of 19th century Indian Ocean trade with ceramic building material
Sophie Hueglin
Tuesday, July 05, 2022 11:25 – 12:55
Room B2 UCKO
90 min | Part 3/3: H19-11. Archaeology of Environment and Human CultureChair: Petr Pokorný, Matthew Walls
ID: 370
Mitigating climate change and practicing risk diversification in the Scandinavian boreal forest in relation to the Late Medieval Agrarian Crisis
Eva Svensson
ID: 1048
Derivative Archaeology – Implicit Déjà vu
Pallavee Gokhale
ID: 1113
Dictionary of Colloquial Terminologies: An Open Database Research work for Archaeology, Anthropology, Cultural Studies & Digital Humanities
Sayan Sanyal
ID: 1182
Sedimentary ancient DNA analysis of Hamanaka 2 site, Rebun Island, Hokkaido, Japan
Rikai Sawafuji
ID: 1397
Diet in the Early Zhou Capital: An isotopic Study of the Zhouyuan Site (~3,000 yr BP) in Shaanxi, China
Jingbo Li
ID: 224
Agricultural Intensification and Environmental Evolution in the Lower Reaches of the Yellow River: A Case Study in Neihuang County, Henan Province
Zhen Qin
ID: 1006
Exchange process by sea on the south-western shores of the Mediterranean (From prehistoric times to early antiquity)
Samira Hamil
ID: 449
Plant and fire management on Amazonian Dark Earth sites from Santarem region, Lower Amazon
Daiana Travassos Alves
ID: 1186
Medieval towns in Deccan, a western Indian plateau region and significance of Nahars (underground water channels) in their growth
Tejaswini Aphale
Tuesday, July 05, 2022 11:25 – 12:55
Room C2 CHILDE
90 min | Part 3/3: F15-19. Archaeology of Material Culture, Art, Landscape and SettlementChair: Luboš Chroustovský, Petr Krištuf
ID: 806
Copper Bronze Age in Upper Gangetic Valley, India: An Assessment
DR. NAZIM HUSAIN AL JAFARI
ID: 1267
The family of the sun god in Val Camonica and in Rock Art: in ancient Indo-European.
Flavio Pinto
ID: 304
Sacred Obo of Mongol Empire in Landscapes of Ulus Juchi, Kazakhstan
Emma Usmanova
ID: 1403
The Mongol Invasion of Hungary in 1241-42: New Archaeological Investigations and Interpretations in their Eurasian Context
József Laszlovszky
ID: 1301
Confronting the Classics: the United States and legacies of Roman imperialism
Emily Hanscam
ID: 1452
Archaeology, Water and Agents in the Cordillera Negra, Ancash Highlands, north-central Andes, Peru
Alexander Herrera
ID: 1453
Past solutions to future challenges: reimagining ancient water technology in the shadow of the melting glaciers of the Cordillera Blanca, Peru.
Alexander Herrera
Tuesday, July 05, 2022 11:25 – 12:55
Room C1 KERN
90 min | Part 1/2: C07-12. Politics and Ethics of the Heritage ArchaeologyChair: Koji Mizoguchi
ID: 1198
Archaeologies for the Liberal political project (1857-1930) in Bolivia
Juan Villanueva Criales
ID: 39
Social Responsibility in Heritage Management Education: A Case from South Asia
Neel Kamal Chapagain
ID: 669
How can archeological sites buried underneath densely populated urban areas be protected and utilized?
Yoshinari Inoue
ID: 1322
Tel Burnat – Joshua’s Shrine or the Enshrinement of a Settler-Colonial Discourse?
Chemi Shiff
ID: 1399
The first chapter of the archeological study of Sefidkuh Makran region with an Ethnoarchaeology
Hossein Vahedi
Tuesday, July 05, 2022 12:55 – 14:15
Room A1 NEUSTUPNÝ
80 min | Break
Tuesday, July 05, 2022 14:15 – 15:45
Room A1 NEUSTUPNÝ
90 min | Part 2/2: F16-03. Community archaeology: Decolonizing archaeological practices to empower descendant communitiesOrganiser: Tanambelo Rasolondrainy, Nancy Rushohora, Valence Silayo
ID: 452
Community Archaeology in Practice: The Dynamics of Jando and Unyago rituals Among the Makonde of Tanzania
Festo Gabriel
ID: 808
Revitalizing colonial memories in Tanzania
NANCY RUSHOHORA
ID: 1045
TRADITIONAL STORYTELLING AS AN ARCHIVE UNDER THREAT
ANTHONIA MNKAMA
ID: 1355
Dolmen Heritage Park: Juffain, Project In the Alkoura District – Irbid Governorate, Jordan
Kennett Schath
ID: 1372
Warratyi: Braiding Knowledge to Understand Cultural Innovation in the Indigenous Settlement of Australia
Claire Smith
ID: 265
The Archaeology of Cannabis in Northwest California: The Bell Springs Taliaferro Site
Nick Angeloff
Tuesday, July 05, 2022 14:15 – 15:45
Room B1 BINFORD
90 min | Part 1/3: Z21-04. World archaeo-geophysics: State of the art & case studies (COST Action SAGA-CA 17131)Organiser: Andrei Asandulesei, Carmen Cuenca-Garcia, Kelsey Lowe
ID: 1114
SAGA (COST 17131): Searching for innovation in integration of geophys and geochem data: compositional data, GPR, magnetics, randomization
Jan Horák
ID: 1175
History of large areas surveys in land use planning in France and the consequences for preservation of our heritage.
Michel DABAS
ID: 718
Archaeo-geophysical prospection in Romania: short retrospective – legal framework – perspectives
Andrei Asandulesei
ID: 400
A new discovery of geophysical Archaeology of Mohr Temple site in Kashi, Xinjiang
Jingxin Qin
ID: 1141
French Archaeogeophysics : a review of 60 years of development.
Michel DABAS
Tuesday, July 05, 2022 14:15 – 15:45
Room B2 UCKO
90 min | Part 1/2: F15-18. Megaliths & Earthworks: making the World togetherOrganiser: Felipe Criado-Boado, Cecilia Dal Zovo, Gail Higginbottom
ID: 1028
Prehistoric Cosmology and Moon Calendar of Early Rice-farming Society in Japan: an attempt of simulation with arcAstroVR.
Akira Goto
ID: 387
The Monumental Landscapes of Chaco Canyon, Southwest North America
Ruth Van Dyke
ID: 862
(Dis)Connection and Identity – More than standing stones
Denise Maria Lima e Silva
ID: 1057
Monumentos arqueológicos y memorias materiales: Historias andinas de larga duración en Iluga Túmulos, Tarapacá, Chile (50 a.C.-1600 d.C.)
Mauricio Uribe
ID: 1205
Drunken mountains: Monoliths for world co-creation in ancient Tiwanaku (Bolivian Andes, 500-1100 ACE)
Juan Villanueva Criales
Tuesday, July 05, 2022 14:15 – 15:45
Room C2 CHILDE
90 min | F15-05. The Prehistory of BeerOrganiser: Elisa Guerra Doce, Patrick E. McGovern, Jan Turek
ID: 1255
Prehistoric Beer: A Global, Multidisciplinary Perspective
Patrick McGovern
ID: 835
Poka, indigenous Galo beverage
bina gandhi DEORI
ID: 836
Tracing Back the Antiquity of Fermented Beverages in Tripura, India : A Historical and an Ethnographic Approach
Jyotshna Rani Khundrakpam
ID: 1237
Mushes, mashes and mugs: tracing beers in West Asian and European prehistory
Eva Rosenstock
ID: 1265
Brew and let die: Implications of the Timeline for Beer Fermentation in the Burial Rites of Prehistoric Europe
Elisa Guerra-Doce
ID: 1258
Prehistoric beer in the gender context
Jan Turek
Tuesday, July 05, 2022 14:15 – 15:45
Room C1 KERN
90 min | Part 2/2: C07-12. Politics and Ethics of the Heritage ArchaeologyChair: Koji Mizoguchi
ID: 697
ABUAB: Using cultural heritage for intercultural dialogue with refugees and immigrants from the Near East and North Africa
Isber Sabrine
ID: 822
Scrap heaps and Nazi technology – monitoring the conversion of a former WWII military camp
Anke S. Weber
ID: 1180
Through a Glass Darkly: A Consideration of the Ethical Challenges and Dilemmas Faced by Stakeholders Involved in the Display, Curation, and Study of Mummified Human Remains in the Capuchin Catacombs of Palermo, Sicily
Kirsty Squires
ID: 1230
Conflicting Post-conflict Narratives: Investigating Memory and Memorialisation 52years after Nigeria’s Civil War
Stanley Onyemechalu
ID: 350
Necro-politics of the Forgotten. An archaeological insight to the post-war memorialization in Northern Chile.
Dante Angelo
ID: 1339
Gender inequality in Japanese archaeological exhibitions
Hiroko Nitta
Tuesday, July 05, 2022 14:15 – 15:45
Foyer West GIMBUTAS
90 min | A03-01. Archaeology, resistance and engagement: the archaeology(ies) of contemporary past under dictatorshipOrganiser: Maryam Dezhamkhooy, Omran Garazhian, Leila Papoli-yazdi
ID: 819
Retrieving material testimonies from Egaña 60, a center of repression and torture during the military-civic dictatorship in Chile
Javiera Letelier Cosmelli
ID: 847
Archaeology of the “missing”: the advances in the last ten years of the searches for bodies of missing persons from the Brazilian civil-military dictatorship (1964-1985)
Caroline Murta Lemos
ID: 1092
Tiny Portugal: A surviving colonial discourse (and site) in a not so former colonial country
Tânia Casimiro
Tuesday, July 05, 2022 15:45 – 16:05
Room A1 NEUSTUPNÝ
20 min | Break
Tuesday, July 05, 2022 16:05 – 17:05
— Choose —
CANCELLED / 60 min | Part 1/2: A04-02. The Archaeology of Coincidence?
Tuesday, July 05, 2022 16:05 – 17:05
Room A1 NEUSTUPNÝ
60 min | Part 1/2: WAC Plenary #2: Special Plenary ‘Maya Land Rights and crafting a Maya future’Moderator: Filiberto Penados
ID: 1435
Lecture
Cristina Coc
ID: 1436
Lecture
Pablo Mis
Tuesday, July 05, 2022 16:05 – 17:05
Room B1 BINFORD
60 min | Part 2/3: Z21-04. World archaeo-geophysics: State of the art & case studies (COST Action SAGA-CA 17131)Organiser: Andrei Asandulesei, Carmen Cuenca-Garcia, Kelsey Lowe
ID: 1123
Magnetic prospection in the Flysch environment. Survey and trial trenching results from two multiperiodic sites in Slovenian Istria (SW Slovenia).
Igor Medarić
ID: 734
Archaeo-geophysics and Preventive Archaeology in Romania. The Case of Tărtăria–Podu Tărtăriei vest Hallstattian Site
Andrei Asandulesei
ID: 662
3D GPR Attribute Characterization for Archaeological Prospection
Wenke Zhao
ID: 1273
Geophysical prospection at Iberian sites in the Eastern coast of the Iberian Peninsula: first results
Carmen Cuenca-Garcia
Tuesday, July 05, 2022 16:05 – 17:05
Room B2 UCKO
60 min | Part 2/2: F15-18. Megaliths & Earthworks: making the World togetherOrganiser: Felipe Criado-Boado, Cecilia Dal Zovo, Gail Higginbottom
ID: 828
Changing worlds: origin and development of Megalithism in northwestern Iberia as seen from a social approach
Gail Higginbottom
ID: 1244
Earth – wood – stone. Façades with and without earthen long barrows in southern Sweden
Lars Larsson
ID: 1256
The Salisbury Seminar on the Characteristics and Challenges for Best Practice Public interpretation of Megalithic Sites in Western Europe
John H Jameson
Tuesday, July 05, 2022 16:05 – 17:05
Room C2 CHILDE
60 min | Part 1/2: E14-03. Peninsular Maritime Trade and Interaction during Prehistoric and Historic Periods in East AsiaOrganiser: Lauren Glover, Jina Heo
ID: 91
Inland-coastal Mobility and Interaction in the Jeulmun Pottery Period of Korea
Matthew Conte
ID: 683
Was there migration in prehistoric East Asia? An estimation of prehistoric population changes using radiocarbon dates and number of excavated pit-houses.
Yongje OH
ID: 544
Red-burnished pottery and Korea-Japan Exchange Relations in the Bronze Age
JEONGEUN LEE
Tuesday, July 05, 2022 16:05 – 17:05
Room C1 KERN
60 min | C08-05. Archaeogaming and decolonising narratives: retelling the stories of the marginaliseOrganiser: Bruno S. R. da Silva, Priscilla Ulguim
ID: 162
Virtual archaeologies
Bruno S. R. da Silva
ID: 493
Developing a Video Game Representing uKhahlamba Drakensberg Traditions
Timon du Toit
ID: 863
Science in game: the potential of archaeological games and a ludic proposal in brazilian archaeology
Lara de Paula Passos
Tuesday, July 05, 2022 16:05 – 17:05
Foyer West GIMBUTAS
60 min | G18-04. Ethics in BioarchaeologyOrganiser: Pamela Geller, Sian Halcrow, Kirsty Squires
ID: 1310
Ethical issues of bioarchaeology in Mainland Southeast Asia
Sian Halcrow
ID: 74
The Ethical Challenges of Destructive Sampling and Analysis in Bioarchaeology
Kirsty Squires
ID: 714
Once forgotten: The foetal and infant remains from the Anatomy Museum at the University of Otago, Dunedin, N.Z.
Megan Southorn
ID: 481
The Genetic Identification of 20th Century War Dead: Forensic Humanitarianism and the New Nationalism
Layla Renshaw
ID: 643
Addressing Non-Indigenous Historic Remains in US Collections: A Model for Best Practice
Jennifer Barron
Tuesday, July 05, 2022 17:05 – 17:25
Room A1 NEUSTUPNÝ
20 min | Break
Tuesday, July 05, 2022 17:25 – 18:55
Room A1 NEUSTUPNÝ
90 min | Part 2/2: WAC Plenary #2: Wars, Conflicts, Crises, and ArchaeologiesModerator: Koji Mizoguchi
ID: 1437
Wars, Conflicts, Crises, and Archaeologies: Introduction to the plenary
Koji Mizoguchi
ID: 1438
Protecting cultural property in the event of armed conflict
Peter Stone
ID: 1439
Climate Change and Social Archaeology
Johannes MuellerPeter Biehl
ID: 1440
How can world archaeological heritage contribute to a better future for all?
Cornelius Holtorf
ID: 1441
Not an obstacle, but part of the solution: what archaeologists and communities can/should do in situations of crises
Eszter Banffy
Tuesday, July 05, 2022 17:25 – 18:55
Room B1 BINFORD
90 min | Part 3/3: Z21-04. World archaeo-geophysics: State of the art & case studies (COST Action SAGA-CA 17131)Organiser: Andrei Asandulesei, Carmen Cuenca-Garcia, Kelsey Lowe
ID: 1210
Palaeoenvironmental analysis of archaeological sites based on high-resolution 3d investigations – new examples from Denmark and Norway
Arne Stamnes
ID: 1320
Multimethod geophysical survey at the Nemocón salt mine archaeological site, Colombia
Saúl Alberto Torres Orjuela
ID: 1321
To See Ambiguity in Magnetometer Data and Uncertainty in Anomalies, Hold Interpretation and Analysis in the Palm of your Hand: The Many Approaches to Automated Analysis of Magnetometer Data
Agnes Schneider
ID: 1325
Magnetometric and seismoacoustic investigations of a roman archaeological site located on the Danube river shore
Sorin Anghel
Tuesday, July 05, 2022 17:25 – 18:55
Room B2 UCKO
90 min | F15-14. Approaching the sounds of the past. Music, acoustics and identityOrganiser: Margarita Diaz-Andreu, Luboš Chroustovský, Neemias Santos da Rosa
ID: 1049
Aerophones, Caves and Shamans
Michael Praxmarer
ID: 715
Prehistoric drums and percussions – between purpose and identity
Luboš Chroustovský
ID: 1263
How relevant is the acoustics of an aggregation site? Cuevas de la Araña as a case study
Neemias Santos da Rosa
ID: 197
Searching for acoustics in Altai’s rock art landscapes
Margarita Díaz-Andreu
ID: 1005
The earliest Music in Ancient Egypt, acoustics and identity
Heidi Köpp-Junk
ID: 1061
Jingles of cultural contact: the sounds of Punic orbit and the Protohistoric indigenous communities in the Balearic Archipelago (650-123 B.C.E.)
Octavio Torres Gomariz
Tuesday, July 05, 2022 17:25 – 18:55
Room C2 CHILDE
90 min | Part 2/2: E14-03. Peninsular Maritime Trade and Interaction during Prehistoric and Historic Periods in East AsiaOrganiser: Lauren Glover, Jina Heo
ID: 164
Bead Maritime Trade and Changes in Political Landscape in the Southwestern Korean Peninsula during the Iron Age
Jina HEO
ID: 116
Changing Stone Bead Manufacturing Technologies in the Korean Peninsula
Lauren Glover
ID: 1291
The archaeological and scientific analysis of blue-decorated ceramics in the Tang and Song dynasties (7th–13th century CE)
Yun Zhang
ID: 94
Transnational Maritime Trade: Chinese Ceramic Vessels Imported to Angkor, Cambodia and Their Impacts on Khmer Societies during the Historic Period
Wai-yee, Sharon Wong
Tuesday, July 05, 2022 17:25 – 18:55
Room C1 KERN
90 min | A04-02. The Archaeology of Coincidence?Organiser: Gary Jackson, Stephen Loring, Larry Zimmerman
ID: 33
“It’s the spirits!”: There are always other stories
Larry Zimmerman
ID: 41
Encounters with a Galena Man
April Sievert
ID: 44
Looking a Snake in the Eye: Spirits and New Pathways to Ontologies of Practice
Peter Schmidt
ID: 680
Ideological Conversion
Gary Jackson
ID: 1032
Archaeology and the Extraordinary in the Amazon
Marcia Bezerra
ID: 1365
“It’s the Ancestors; They Know What We Are Doing:” A True Story of an FBI Antiquities Case
Holly Cusack-McVeigh
ID: 1405
“The wind that blows…”
Stephen Loring
Wednesday, July 06, 2022 09:00 – 18:00
Room 1
Excursions
Thursday, July 07, 2022 08:00 – 09:30
Room A1 NEUSTUPNÝ
90 min | Part 1/3: H19-06. Climate Change and HeritageOrganiser: Sara Ayers-Rigby, Elinor Graham, Vibeke Vandrup Martens
ID: 759
A Global Perspective: Case Studies of Climate Change and Heritage from Svalbard, Scotland and South Florida
Sara Ayers-Rigsby
ID: 1246
When the rivers (don’t) flow: the impact of changed river flow on Aboriginal archaeological sites in south-eastern Australia
Amanda Hansford
ID: 1147
The Dam, the Temple and Reconstructing the Past through the Nostalgia of the Lost Heritage: A case study of the Submerged Ancient Monument Complex and its ecological settings at Palasdeo in central reaches of Bhima Basin in Maharashtra
Tishyarakshita Nagarkar
ID: 597
Climate Change and Heritage: The case of the Sanctuary of Olympia
Kleanthi Pateraki
ID: 657
Cultural heritage and coastal community engagement at the World Heritage Site of Kilwa in Tanzania
Edward Pollard
Thursday, July 07, 2022 08:00 – 09:30
Room B1 BINFORD
90 min | Part 1/2: G17-02. Northeast Asia and the ancient DNA revolution in interdisciplinary perspectiveOrganiser: Mark Hudson, Chao Ning, Martine Robbeets
ID: 364
Admixture in Northeast Asia in interdisciplinary perspective
Martine Robbeets
ID: 71
Emergence of ‘Transeurasian’ language families in northeasten Asia viewed from archaeological evidence
Kazuo Miyamoto
ID: 182
Reconstructing the genetic history of populations in northeast Asia
Chao Ning
ID: 54
Tocharian inroads: Loanwords as an indicator of (agri)cultural exchange
Rasmus G. Bjørn
ID: 1324
Archaeolinguistic Evidence of Agricultural Interaction in Ancient Northeast Asia
Bingcong Deng
Thursday, July 07, 2022 08:00 – 09:30
Room B2 UCKO
90 min | Part 1/2: A01-02. Multidimensional Materials: Rock Art, Relationality, and Change Through Time and SpaceOrganiser: Liam Brady, Jamie Hampson, Courtney Nimura, Rebecca O’Sullivan
ID: 98
Rock art use by dissociated societies: the East Asian context
Rebecca O’Sullivan
ID: 1303
Conservatism and change in Yanyuwa rock art: exploring absence, agency, and relationality northern Australia’s southwest Gulf country
Liam Brady
ID: 105
A multisensory approach to Rock Art
Peter Skoglund
ID: 471
(re)connecting ancestral time: re-evaluating concepts of superimposition and vandalism in rock art studies from a global perspective
Ana Paula Motta
ID: 103
From coast inland: streams of interaction in Scandinavian Bronze Age rock art
Courtney Nimura
Thursday, July 07, 2022 08:00 – 09:30
Room C2 CHILDE
90 min | Z21-08. “Being human”: Integrated approach to the transformation of the material world, through cognitive experiences of body and mindOrganiser: Liliana Janik, Naoko Matsumoto
ID: 498
An integrative approach to the faces on figurines and pottery: Cognitive psychological experiment and archaeological analysis
Naoko Matsumoto
ID: 749
Pottery, Body, Technology, and Cognition
Hiromi Hirakawa
ID: 23
Emergence and development of material manifestation of human spatial cognition: Division, segmentation and numbers embedded in the design of the material world
Takehiko Matsugi
ID: 588
Changing Materialities of Emotion in Ancient Aksum (50-800 AD)
Dil Singh Basanti
ID: 810
Why Did the Japanese Bows Became So Long : Comparative Archeology
Mitsuhiko Okayasu
ID: 1333
Contemporary Archaeology on Kiwiana from Aotearoa New Zealand: Examining self- and group-creation through analyses of kitsch material culture
Helen A. Alderson
Thursday, July 07, 2022 08:00 – 09:30
Room C1 KERN
90 min | Part 1/3: A01-06. Revisiting regionality to understand world rock artOrganiser: Inés Domingo-Sanz, Ndukuyakhe Ndlovu
ID: 1181
Pigment recipes for rock painting in Eastern Cordillera of Colombia, South America
Judith Trujillo
ID: 1389
Paintings of lions and felines in the San rock art of the southern Maloti-Drakensberg and adjacent Stormberg: Hunting, potency and ritual specialists
Dawn Green
ID: 841
Hundreds of methods to answer the same question. Caribbean rock art under interdisciplinary studies.
Karolina Juszczyk
ID: 1088
Trends in rock art east of the Northern Ice Field
Francisca Moya Cañoles
ID: 1131
Change and continuity in East Siberian rock art
Irina Ponomareva
Thursday, July 07, 2022 08:00 – 09:30
Foyer West GIMBUTAS
90 min | H19-01. Migration, Trade and Settlement patterns within extreme landscapes and challenging climatic conditionsOrganiser: Stella Bickelmann, Nagendra Singh Rawat, Ekta Singh
ID: 327
Palaeolithic Archaeology Settlement: A Case Study of Sagileru Basin, India
Manoj Singh
ID: 4
A Study on the Changing Patterns of Spatial Distribution in Amsa-dong Site Focusing on the Topographic Changes of the Neolithic and the Three Kingdoms Period
Sun Woong Yoo
ID: 772
The possible impacts of climate change on human occupation in the Shimao region in northern China
Ying Tung Fung
ID: 1063
The Lost Mines of the Mithaka: Hunter-Gatherer Mining for Trade and Local Use in Channel Country, Far South West Queensland
Douglas Williams
ID: 653
History of Human Migration and Settlements in Garhwal Central Himalaya, India: An Archaeological Assessment
Nagendra Rawat
ID: 148
Archaeological investigation of Human Migration and Trade in Trans-Himalayan region of Himachal Pradesh: a study based on new findings from Spiti valley
75 min | Part 2/3: H19-06. Climate Change and HeritageOrganiser: Sara Ayers-Rigby, Elinor Graham, Vibeke Vandrup Martens
ID: 1169
CULTCOAST – measurements of climate parameters to evaluate climate change induced geo-hazard threats to coastal cultural heritage sites and landscapes
Vibeke Vandrup Martens
ID: 1154
Beyond Endangerment: Rethinking heritage and museums for climate action
Rodney Harrison
ID: 1162
Community engagement at Scotland’s eroding coast
Ellie Graham
ID: 1074
Documenting Heritage at Risk Using 3D Methods: A View from Florida, USA
Emily Jane Murray
ID: 1100
Advancing Threatened Heritages Through Collaborative Science-Telling
Carole Nash
Thursday, July 07, 2022 09:50 – 11:05
Room B1 BINFORD
75 min | Part 2/2: G17-02. Northeast Asia and the ancient DNA revolution in interdisciplinary perspectiveOrganiser: Mark Hudson, Chao Ning, Martine Robbeets
ID: 58
The aDNA revolution and the archaeology of the southern Ryukyu Islands
Mark Hudson
ID: 200
A tripartite ancestry model of modern Japanese genomic origins
Shigeki Nakagome
ID: 107
Promotors of language dispersal in past societies of Northeast Asia
Michal Schwarz
ID: 78
Yukaghir language family – On its position in genealogical classification
Václav Blažek
ID: 51
Nuclear Altaic phylogeny (Turkic, Mongolic, Tungusic): comparing reconstructed Swadesh wordlists of three proto-languages
Alexei S. Kassian
Thursday, July 07, 2022 09:50 – 11:05
Room B2 UCKO
75 min | Part 2/2: A01-02. Multidimensional Materials: Rock Art, Relationality, and Change Through Time and SpaceOrganiser: Liam Brady, Jamie Hampson, Courtney Nimura, Rebecca O’Sullivan
ID: 1193
PODOMORPHS FROM NORTHWESTERN PORTUGAL – INTERPRETATIONS AND MEANINGS. FROM THE ARCHAEOLOGIST’S VIEW TO THE POPULAR INTERPRETATION
José Moreira
ID: 1309
Rock Art and the Eternal Return: Pastoral movement, zoomorphic motives, and accumulation in the Mongolian Altai Mountain
Cecilia Dal Zovo
ID: 1008
Changing forms and contexts of rock art: A 3500-year sequence in the Mariana Islands of Pacific Oceania
Mike Carson
ID: 223
The Asphendou Cave Petroglyphs: An Eyewitness Account of Pleistocene Crete
Thomas Strasser
Thursday, July 07, 2022 09:50 – 11:05
Room C2 CHILDE
75 min | Part 1/2: F15-02. The Beaker Age. Exploring the Third Millennium BC spread of shared cultural identity in EurasiaOrganiser: Martin Furholt, Kristian Kristiansen, Jan Turek
ID: 1390
The Beaker Age – An Introduction
Kristian Kristiansen
ID: 1305
The European Corded Ware and the Politics of Migration
Martin Furholt
ID: 1261
The Beaker “Franchising”: The regional variability of the Bell Beaker Phenomenon
Jan Turek
ID: 846
Settlements of Middle Dnieper Variant of Pit-Grave Culture
Mykhaylo Syvolap
Thursday, July 07, 2022 09:50 – 11:05
Room C1 KERN
75 min | Part 2/3: A01-06. Revisiting regionality to understand world rock artOrganiser: Inés Domingo-Sanz, Ndukuyakhe Ndlovu
ID: 1081
The Semantics of Stone Numbers. Re-interpretation of Mesoamerican Pecked-dots Figures on the Case Study of Petroglyph from Tetzcotzinco (Mexico)
Daniel Prusaczyk
ID: 1097
Regional variability, rhythms and communities of practice in rock art production in North Central Chile
Francisca Moya Cañoles
ID: 1139
Seeking for clues on the birth of visual narratives and anthropocentrism in prehistoric art. A comparative approach.
Inés Domingo
ID: 1229
TOWARDS A STANDARDIZED DESCRIPTIVE FRAMEWORK FOR REGIONAL DIFFERENCE IN ROCK ART: A SOUTH AFRICAN PERSPECTIVE
Ghilraen Laue
ID: 395
THE REPRESENTATION OF THE PAMPATHERIUM IN THE ROCK PAINTINGS OF THE NATIONAL PARK SERRA DA CAPIVARA – PI AND ITS RELATIONSHIPS WITH THE BRAZILIAN PREHISTORIC MAN.
Vitor Almeida
Thursday, July 07, 2022 09:50 – 11:05
Foyer West GIMBUTAS
60 min | A03-03. The Archaeology of Zoos – ReloadedOrganiser: Kola Adekola, Cornelius Holtorf
ID: 1116
Reimagining Zoos: A Call for Interdisciplinary Collaboration in Conservation and Curation
Hanna Marie Pageau
ID: 1167
Landscapes of flight – Bird territories as processual space in the first half of the 20th century
Christina Katharina May
ID: 1064
PARK OR HERITAGE? REFLECTING ON THE NYERERE GAME RESERVE
VALENCE SILAYO
ID: 95
Why are all the zoos in the world so similar to each other?
Cornelius Holtorf
Thursday, July 07, 2022 11:05 – 11:25
Room A1 NEUSTUPNÝ
20 min | Break
Thursday, July 07, 2022 11:25 – 12:40
Room A1 NEUSTUPNÝ
75 min | Part 3/3: H19-06. Climate Change and HeritageOrganiser: Sara Ayers-Rigby, Elinor Graham, Vibeke Vandrup Martens
ID: 1166
Indigenous Archaeologies, Shell Heaps, and Climate Change Resilience: A Case Study from Passamaquoddy Homeland
Bonnie Newsom
ID: 1079
Applying a Collaborative Science Mindset to Address North American Heritage at Risk
Sarah Miller
ID: 768
Climate Change and Community Archaeology in Coastal Ecuador
Sara Ayers-Rigsby
ID: 1199
Even the shell mounds are gone. What archaeology can contribute to understand the impact of the environmental catastrophe in the shell mounds of Djobel, Guinea-Bissau.
Bruno Maximo
ID: 1177
A World View of the Archaeological Heritage Community and the Impacts of Climate Change
Marcy Rockman
Thursday, July 07, 2022 11:25 – 12:40
Room B1 BINFORD
75 min | Part 1/2: E14-02. Global Evidence of the Late Pleistocene Seafaring and Maritime Adaptation: When, Where, and HowOrganiser: Jon Erlandson, Yousuke Kaifu, Sue O’Connor, Rintaro Ono
ID: 605
Seafaring to Sahul: interdisciplinary approaches to understanding maritime activity in deep time
Helen Farr
ID: 465
Pleistocene settlement of the Wallacean Archipelago: How, when and where?
Sue O’Connor
ID: 239
Of (wo)men and fish: Late Pleistocene fishing practices, environmental shifts and human remains from Alor Island (Lesser Sunda Islands, Indonesia)
Sofia C. Samper Carro
ID: 545
Raw material transport and Late Pleistocene/Early Holocene maritime interaction in Southeastern Indonesia – East Timor
Christian Reepmeyer
Thursday, July 07, 2022 11:25 – 12:40
Room B2 UCKO
75 min | Part 1/2: F15-15. Excavating Identity in Palestine from Prehistory to the PresentOrganiser: Nils Anfinsent, Brian Boyd, Hamed Salem
ID: 1357
Ethnic Identities and the Responsibilities of Naming Prehistoric “Cultures”
Brian Boyd
ID: 1323
The Neolithic period in Palestine: Natural development vs human cooperation/competition
Ghattas Jeries Sayej
ID: 1348
Building Walls and Temples: Urban Identity of Early Bronze Age Tell et-Tell
Hamed Salem
Thursday, July 07, 2022 11:25 – 12:40
Room C2 CHILDE
75 min | Part 2/2: F15-02. The Beaker Age. Exploring the Third Millennium BC spread of shared cultural identity in EurasiaOrganiser: Martin Furholt, Kristian Kristiansen, Jan Turek
ID: 1377
From local to supraregional interrelations of the beaker phenomena
Ralph Grossmann
ID: 1383
Beaker ceremonial landscapes, cemeteries and ancestral worship
Petr Krištuf
ID: 1392
Rethinking the 5,000-yr-old Tin Bronze in Xinjiang, China: An Early Metal Anomaly related to “Afanasievo”?
Peng Peng
Thursday, July 07, 2022 11:25 – 12:40
Room C1 KERN
75 min | Part 3/3: A01-06. Revisiting regionality to understand world rock artOrganiser: Inés Domingo-Sanz, Ndukuyakhe Ndlovu
ID: 1151
Eastern African rock art between Africa and Arabia
Tadele Solomon
ID: 1394
Exploring regional variation in southern African rock art: assessing the impact of environment on motifs represented in the Bushmen rock art
Ndukuyakhe Ndlovu
ID: 1128
Rock art in the Colombian Amazon: tensions between World Heritage and local communities
Sonia Archila
ID: 444
EXPLORATIONS AND DOCUMENTATION OF ROCK ART AT MANDIKHOH, HOSHANGABAD DISTRICT, MADHYA PRADESH
Rajesh Poojari
Thursday, July 07, 2022 11:25 – 12:40
Foyer West GIMBUTAS
90 min | A02-04. Ethnoarchaeology and Later European Prehistory – Venturing the Ridge between Hypothesis, Plausibility, and EvidenceChair: Gary Jackson, Claire Smith
ID: 245
An Ethnoarchaeological Perspective on Prehistoric Mortuary Treatment and Ritual: Two Case Studies from Lower Austria
Estella Weiss-Krejci
ID: 1225
Çukuriçi Höyük: Household economics in the Early Bronze Age Aegean
Sabina Cveček
ID: 763
Complications on the peripheries – A critique of the Kurgan hypothesis based on archaeogenetics
Csaba Barnabas Horvath
ID: 548
The historico-genetic foundation of ethnographic comparisons and an example from the analysis of Late Bronze Age jewellery hoards in France.
José Eduardo Macedo de Medeiros
Thursday, July 07, 2022 12:40 – 14:00
Room A1 NEUSTUPNÝ
80 min | Break
Thursday, July 07, 2022 14:00 – 15:00
Room A1 NEUSTUPNÝ
60 min | C08-04. International Perspectives on Heritage and Public History Education (Round table)Organiser: Jaroslav Ira, Alicia McGill
ID: 676
Moderator
Jaroslav Ira
ID: 126
Panelist
Alicia McGill
ID: 1036
WHAT HERITAGE STUDIES IS ABOUT: notes from a career teaching it at universities
John Carman
ID: 1159
Critical and comparative approaches to teaching heritage studies in the UK and beyond
Rodney Harrison
Thursday, July 07, 2022 14:00 – 15:00
Room B1 BINFORD
60 min | Part 2/2: E14-02. Global Evidence of the Late Pleistocene Seafaring and Maritime Adaptation: When, Where, and HowOrganiser: Jon Erlandson, Yousuke Kaifu, Sue O’Connor, Rintaro Ono
ID: 1040
Human adaptive flexibility in the insular rainforests of the far western Pacific Ocean
Dylan Gaffney
ID: 1185
Early maritime migration and island adaptation by modern humans along the northern route in Wallacea: New evidence from Central Sulawesi, Indonesia
Rintaro Ono
ID: 169
Maritime adaptation of Paleolithic people in the Ryukyu Islands
Masaki Fujita
ID: 1053
Toward a synthetic model for Palaeolithic seafaring: A case in the Ryukyu Islands, southwestern Japan
Yousuke Kaifu
Thursday, July 07, 2022 14:00 – 15:00
Room B2 UCKO
60 min | Part 2/2: F15-15. Excavating Identity in Palestine from Prehistory to the PresentOrganiser: Nils Anfinsent, Brian Boyd, Hamed Salem
ID: 1347
Children and the Land: the Past is Present in Wadi Faynan
Arwa Badran
ID: 1349
Archaeology and Identity Construction: the Terra Sancta Museum (Jerusalem) as a Case Study
Hana Irshaid
ID: 1311
Management and conservation of the World Heritage Properties in Palestine under Israeli Occupying power: Challenges and opportunities
Dr. Ahmed Rjoob
Thursday, July 07, 2022 14:00 – 15:00
Room C2 CHILDE
60 min | F15-03. Archaeology in conflict zones: a zero-sum game?Organiser: Akram Ijla, Ghattas Jeries Sayej, Chemi Shiff
ID: 18
Who owns the past?
Ghattas J. Sayej
ID: 1117
The Practice of Archaeology in the Face of Security Challenges on the Jos Plateau and Adjoining Lowlands, Central Nigeria
Jonathan Ezekiel Azi
ID: 19
Archaeological sites as sites of settler colonial memory: the case study of Tel Seilun/Shiloh
Chemi Shiff
Thursday, July 07, 2022 14:00 – 15:00
Room C1 KERN
60 min | D11-05. Indigenous and Community ArchaeologyChair: Ndukuyakhe Ndlovu
ID: 67
Museums as pre-Indigenous sites of healing
Paora Tapsell
ID: 795
Digitisation and accessibility: A perfect combination or too much promise?
Claudia Zehrt
ID: 1020
Ongoing Colonization and Indigenous Environmental Heritage Rights: A Learning Experience with Cree First Nation Communities, Saskatchewan, Canada
Ranjan Datta
ID: 1335
Heritage as Connection: Repatriation and Reconciliation in Canada
Chelsea H. Meloche
Thursday, July 07, 2022 14:00 – 15:00
Foyer West GIMBUTAS
60 min | Part 1/2: A02-03. Global Perspectives on the Archaeology and Ethnoarchaeology of SaltOrganiser: Marius Alexianu, Paul Eubanks
ID: 12
The Cultural Uses of Salt and Mineral Springs in the Late Prehistoric Southeastern United States
Paul Eubanks
ID: 645
Reconstructing the Life of an Ancient Trade Route: Aksumite Salt trade (400 BCE-CE 900), Northern Ethiopia
Helina Woldekiros
ID: 823
Salt making techniques and salt makers in pre-colonial Bengal, India
BINA GANDHI DEORI
Thursday, July 07, 2022 14:00 – 15:00
Meeting room D (only virtual sessions)
60 min | Part 1/3: E14-07. Maritime Archaeology in Latin America and Iberoamérica: New perspectives in the 21st centuryOrganiser: Alexandra Biar, Nicolas Ciarlo, Christophe Delaere, Nicolás Lira
ID: 1069
Miniature models of three-beam rafts in the South-Central Andes
Benjamín Ballester
ID: 1133
ETNOARQUEOLOGÍA MARÍTIMA. BALSAS DE MADERA DE TRES CUERPOS DE ARICA (1.000-1.450 d.C.)
Felipe Rubio-Munita
ID: 1240
Community, economic and technological issues of navigation at Lake Titicaca: from totora balsa to hull boats
Christophe Delaere
ID: 1135
Northern Patagonia Inland Navigation Routes
Nicolas Lira San Martin
ID: 1290
Aquatic Transhumance in Nahuel Huapi: Update and Perspectives on Ancestral Navigation in North Patagonian Lakes
Romina Braicovich
Thursday, July 07, 2022 15:00 – 15:20
Room A1 NEUSTUPNÝ
20 min | Break
Thursday, July 07, 2022 15:20 – 16:20
Room A1 NEUSTUPNÝ
60 min | Part 1/2: WAC Plenary #3: Award ceremony
ID: 1447
Peter Ucko Memorial Award
Claire Smith
ID: 1445
Inaugural Joan Gero Book Award
Kathryn Weedman Arthur
ID: 1455
World Archaeological Congress – Joan M. Gero Book Award
Peter Stone
Thursday, July 07, 2022 15:20 – 16:20
Room B1 BINFORD
60 min | Part 1/2: D11-02. Indigenous archaeologies and histories from the South AmericaOrganiser: Michael Heckenberger, Juliana Salles Machado
ID: 241
CAN WE TALK ABOUT INDIGENOUS ARCHAEOLOGIES IN CHILE?
Patricia Ayala
ID: 324
The Deep Indigenous History of the Guaporé River Basin
Francisco Pugliese
ID: 594
“THE PAST IS IN FRONT OF US”: LAKLÃNÕ’S INDIGENOUS HISTORIES AND CONTEMPORARY STRUGGLES
Juliana Salles Machado
Thursday, July 07, 2022 15:20 – 16:20
Room B2 UCKO
60 min | Part 1/2: C08-08. Archaeology and the management of sensitive cultural heritage: trends and directionsOrganiser: Manuelina Duarte Cândido, Leandro Matthews Cascon, Camila Moraes Wichers, Alejandra Saladino
ID: 570
New curatorship and collection management perspectives at the Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology, University of São Paulo (MAE-USP)
Paulo DeBlasis
ID: 1384
Fuegian collections in Central Europe: formation process, international circulation and repatriation issues about ethnographic objects gathered by Martin Gusinde
Ana Butto
ID: 1340
Biographies of Things: collecting practices and coloniality in the Lagoa Miararré collection, Xingu, Brazil
Camila Moraes Wichers
Thursday, July 07, 2022 15:20 – 16:20
Room C2 CHILDE
60 min | Part 1/2: A03-05. Contemporary Approaches to the Study of Cultural ErasureOrganiser: Brian Daniels, Zoya Masoud
ID: 791
Bombing and bulldozing: A case study of cultural erasure of the Uwais al-Qarani, Ammar ibn Yasir, and Obay ibn Qays shrines in Raqqa, Syria
Katharyn Hanson
ID: 315
The destruction of invisible monuments in the old City of Aleppo, Syria
Zoya Masoud
ID: 506
Displacement, occupation, erasure: Contested religious heritage in the Republic of Georgia
Grace Golden
Thursday, July 07, 2022 15:20 – 16:20
Room C1 KERN
60 min | Part 1/2: C07-03. Heritage as An Action Word: Uses Beyond Communal MemoryOrganiser: Kelly Britt, Susan Shay
ID: 210
An archaeological relic, ritual space and the unfolding of a social process
Bishnupriya Basak
ID: 694
The Preservation of Uku Festival as Cultural Heritage in Umuchu, Anambra State Nigeria
Ifeyinwa Emejulu
ID: 266
Challenging the Authorized Past: Heritage as a Useful Tool for Indigenous Empowerment
Susan Shay
Thursday, July 07, 2022 15:20 – 16:20
Foyer West GIMBUTAS
60 min | Part 2/2: A02-03. Global Perspectives on the Archaeology and Ethnoarchaeology of SaltOrganiser: Marius Alexianu, Paul Eubanks
ID: 1072
The techniques of salt making pottery in Japan
Itsuki Okamoto
ID: 1254
Understanding salt in prehistory: ethnoarchaeological research in Romania
Marius-Tiberiu Alexianu
ID: 1281
Salt Springs from Cacica (Romania) – an Ethnoarchaeological Approach
Andrei Asandulesei
ID: 1308
A Comparative Approach to the Production of Salt: Traditional Salt-making Sites in México vs. Prehistoric Brine-boiling Factories in Iberia
Elisa Guerra-Doce
Thursday, July 07, 2022 15:20 – 16:20
Meeting room D (only virtual sessions)
60 min | Part 2/3: E14-07. Maritime Archaeology in Latin America and Iberoamérica: New perspectives in the 21st centuryOrganiser: Alexandra Biar, Nicolas Ciarlo, Christophe Delaere, Nicolás Lira
ID: 1361
The Concept of Maritorio [Maritorium] and its applicability to understand maritime cultures of the past: Boats, technical systems of mobility and occupation of space in canoeist groups of Southern Patagonia.
Miguel Angel Chapanoff Cerda
ID: 1356
Early watercraft and indigenous navigation in the Rio de la Plata basin through documentary evidence
Elena Saccone
ID: 1288
Digital geohumanities and maritime archaeology: the case of the Relaciones Geográficas de Nueva España
Mariana Favila Vázquez
ID: 1176
An archaeological approach to the understanding of the nautical space in the Wayuú indigenous community, Guajira, Northern Colombia
Carlos del Cairo
Thursday, July 07, 2022 16:20 – 16:40
Room A1 NEUSTUPNÝ
20 min | Break
Thursday, July 07, 2022 16:40 – 17:40
Room A1 NEUSTUPNÝ
60 min | Part 2/2: WAC Plenary #3: Commemorating the Late Professor Michael Day and the Early Days of WAC
ID: 1443
Michael Day: An unlikely archaeologist
Bernard Wood
ID: 1444
Michael Day: The person who could decide our fate
Peter Stone
Thursday, July 07, 2022 16:40 – 17:40
Room B1 BINFORD
60 min | Part 2/2: D11-02. Indigenous archaeologies and histories from the South AmericaOrganiser: Michael Heckenberger, Juliana Salles Machado
ID: 775
Muraycoko Surabudodot – Rock Art and Munduruku Territorialization in the Middle Tapajós River, Southern Amazonia, Brazil.
Raoni Valle
ID: 1233
Amerindian Monumentality at the mouth of Amazon River in Anthropocene: Pre-Colombian Legacy and Contemporary Indigenous Knowledge
João Darcy de Moura Saldanha
ID: 1342
Past Worlds, Contemporary Issues: Collaborative Archaeology in the Bolivian Amazon
Carla Jaimes Betancourt
Thursday, July 07, 2022 16:40 – 17:40
Room B2 UCKO
60 min | Part 2/2: C08-08. Archaeology and the management of sensitive cultural heritage: trends and directionsOrganiser: Manuelina Duarte Cândido, Leandro Matthews Cascon, Camila Moraes Wichers, Alejandra Saladino
ID: 781
On things which are “not the way they were supposed to be”: indigenous strategies and museum collections
Caroline Fernandes Caromano
ID: 1338
About Iny-Karajá indigenous heritage: challenges and possibilities for a decolonial archaeological practice
Camila Moraes Wichers
ID: 782
Brazilian Stone Axes in European Museums: from comparative material to National and Indigenous identities
Leandro Matthews Cascon
ID: 1184
“On the floor”: Creative expressions, post-apartheid youth in South Africa and “heritage that hurts”
Umana [ Theogene ] Niwenshuti
Thursday, July 07, 2022 16:40 – 17:40
Room C2 CHILDE
60 min | Part 2/2: A03-05. Contemporary Approaches to the Study of Cultural ErasureOrganiser: Brian Daniels, Zoya Masoud
ID: 505
Identifying sites of Indigenous cultural erasure: A case study from the Upper Klamath River Canyon, USA
Brian I. Daniels
ID: 1318
Cultural Erasure and the Willandra Lakes Ancestral Remains
Gary Pappin
ID: 222
Bringing back the collective memories of Mexico City through a mobile application
Sandra L Lopez Varela
Thursday, July 07, 2022 16:40 – 17:40
Room C1 KERN
60 min | Part 2/2: C07-03. Heritage as An Action Word: Uses Beyond Communal MemoryOrganiser: Kelly Britt, Susan Shay
ID: 282
Sensing the City: Historic Landscapes Empowering Future Communities
Kelly Britt
ID: 410
Architectural Heritage as a Response to Disasters in Puerto Rico
Kyle Killian
ID: 761
VISUALIZATION OF MEMORY IN THE CULTURAL PRACTICES OF REPRESENTING THE HERITAGE: CAN PAST TO BE MODERN
Vladimir Ionesov
ID: 1156
Heritage as Future-Making Practices
Rodney Harrison
Thursday, July 07, 2022 16:40 – 17:40
Foyer West GIMBUTAS
60 min | E14-05. Stone Age Seas: Mapping Voyages and Maritime DiffusionsOrganiser: Alice Kehoe, Bettina Schulz Paulsson
ID: 31
Seafarers’ Perspective
Alice Kehoe
ID: 301
STONE AGE MARINERS: PROJECTING INTO THE PAST
Stephen C. Jett
ID: 2
The Curious Case of Ahhotep’s Metal Ship Models
Shelley Wachsmann
Thursday, July 07, 2022 16:40 – 17:40
Meeting room D (only virtual sessions)
60 min | Part 3/3: E14-07. Maritime Archaeology in Latin America and Iberoamérica: New perspectives in the 21st centuryOrganiser: Alexandra Biar, Nicolas Ciarlo, Christophe Delaere, Nicolás Lira
ID: 1163
Archeology of the Manuel Luis Parcel State Marine Park: material culture and society
Beatriz Bandeira
ID: 779
The metal sheathing of wooden ships. Historical and archaeological insights into the transfer of technology between Spain and the Spanish American territories (late-18th to mid-19th Century)
Diana Arano
ID: 1055
An examination of the archaeological record associated with shipboard health in La Ballenera shipwreck (late 16th century, Algeciras, Spain)
Julieta Frère
ID: 1124
Ongoing research on 19th Century shipwrecks and coastal sites located in North-Patagonia, Argentina
Nicolás C. Ciarlo
Thursday, July 07, 2022 17:45 – 21:00
Room A1 NEUSTUPNÝ
Congress party
Friday, July 08, 2022 08:00 – 09:00
— Choose —
CANCELLED / 60 min | H20-05. Reviving Water Infrastructures
Friday, July 08, 2022 08:00 – 09:00
Room A1 NEUSTUPNÝ
60 min | Part 1/2: C07-11. Changing contemporary understanding and use of the pastOrganiser: Peter Stone
ID: 298
(World) Heritage sites as ambassadors for peace
Peter Stone
ID: 551
Board Games of the Ancient World: Approaches to Reconstructing Intangible Cultural Heritage
Walter Crist
ID: 624
Creating Heritage Futures at Mayapur, West Bengal: The Entanglement of Traditional Cosmology with Threads of Posthumanism and the New Materialism
Michael Cremo
Friday, July 08, 2022 08:00 – 09:00
Room B1 BINFORD
60 min | Part 1/2: Z21-18. Memory (and forgetting) in archaeologyOrganiser: Carola Metzner-Nebelsick, Timothy Taylor
ID: 675
Early Archaic Communities: Flintknapping Practices as an Agent of Cultural Memory Transfer
Michele Troutman
ID: 1218
Memory and forgetting. Case studies of megalithic monuments from the NW of the Iberian Peninsula
Luciano Vilas Boas
ID: 1313
Monument or memorial reenactment. A reconsideration of early to mid-5th millennium BCE Central european rondels
Louis D. Nebelsick
Friday, July 08, 2022 08:00 – 09:00
Room B2 UCKO
60 min | Part 1/2: F15-08. Prehistoric kinship beyond ‘family’: concepts, scales, inference, and significanceOrganiser: Bradley E. Ensor, Stella Souvatzi
ID: 1059
Kinship and Relatedness in Socio-Cultural Anthropology: Yesterday and Today
Sabina Cveček
ID: 322
The Late Classic Islas de Los Cerros Landscape: A Tapestry of Kinship, Identities, Histories, and Ancestries
Bradley Ensor
ID: 29
Concentricity, circularity and kinship
STELLA SOUVATZI
Friday, July 08, 2022 08:00 – 09:00
Room C2 CHILDE
60 min | G18-06. What we can gain from analysis of masticatory systemOrganiser: Hiroko Hashimoto, Carolyn Rando, Ayako Shibutani
ID: 433
Exploring evolution of sociality in human from epidemiological approach to periodontal disease
Daisuke Shimizu
ID: 49
Archaeobotanical Evidence of Dietary Variation in Dental Calculus: Case Studies of Prehistoric Hunter-gatherers in Northern Japan
Ayako Shibutani
ID: 1174
Betel Nut Chewing and its Oral Health Implications: An Archaeological Investigation in Northern Luzon, Philippines
Eleanor M. S. Lim
ID: 807
Macronutrient-based model using carbon isotope ratios in dentine collagen and enamel carbonate reveals millet consumption by prehistoric Japanese populations
Haruka Yamaguchi
Friday, July 08, 2022 08:00 – 09:00
Room C1 KERN
60 min | Part 1/2: E14-01. Aquatic Neolithic Formations in Global PerspectiveOrganiser: Mark Hudson, Junzo Uchiyama
ID: 1400
The site of Ostorf (Germany): new amino acid isotopic evidence for a Mesolithic lifestyle during the Middle Neolithic
Ricardo Fernandes
ID: 603
Fish Remains from two Late Neolithic Sites at the Eastern Coast of Zhejiang Province, China
Xuchu Zhu
ID: 66
Changes in Sea Resource Exploitation Strategy during the Korean Neolithization
Jangsuk Kim
ID: 670
Dietary Shift towards Terrestrial Resources in Neolithization?: A Northeast Asian Perspective
Junzo Uchiyama
Friday, July 08, 2022 08:00 – 09:00
Foyer West GIMBUTAS
60 min | C07-07. Values, Heritage, and the ‘Package’Organiser: Gillian Juleff, Anura Manatunga, Prerana SrimaalChair: Erin Riggs
ID: 1337
Oral History as Future-Oriented Archaeological Heritage
Erin Riggs
ID: 1395
Cultural Heritage of Myanmar: The Victims of War by Political Conflicts
Sithu Htun Soe
ID: 1295
Authenticity as Ontological: The Perspectives and Priorities of Rural Terracotta Pot Makers in Bishnupur, West Bengal
Anena Majumdar
ID: 406
Historical Islamic Architecture in North-western Jordan “Heritage Mosques in Irbid Governorate “
Dua Taan
Friday, July 08, 2022 08:00 – 17:55
Poster section
Poster viewing
Friday, July 08, 2022 09:00 – 09:20
Room A1 NEUSTUPNÝ
20 min | Break
Friday, July 08, 2022 09:20 – 10:50
Room A1 NEUSTUPNÝ
90 min | Part 2/2: C07-11. Changing contemporary understanding and use of the pastOrganiser: Peter Stone
ID: 1312
Heritage and The Present: Archaeology Products and Identity Formation in Igbo Ukwu, Southeastern Nigeria.
Elizabeth Adeyemo
ID: 1129
Mentalscapes of Slavery in Eastern Africa
Herman Kiriama
ID: 1187
Rebuilding Landscapes: Restoration and Erasure at Heritage Sites
Dawn M. Rutecki
ID: 1201
Localising the Korean War: uses of student soldiers’ memorials in South Korea
Geonyoung Kim
ID: 1208
Public or Competitive? The changes of Hutong in the Old Beijing city from urban memory
Shiting Lin
ID: 1304
Unrecognized values of heritage?: Kofun boom considered
Katsuyuki Okamura
Friday, July 08, 2022 09:20 – 10:50
Room B1 BINFORD
90 min | Part 2/2: Z21-18. Memory (and forgetting) in archaeologyOrganiser: Carola Metzner-Nebelsick, Timothy Taylor
ID: 1202
Journeying the valley: the hill of Checua, Colombia as a mnemonic and sacred node of the landscape
Juan Pablo Ospina
ID: 1065
Creating lineage(s) – creating supremacy via tradition in Prehistory. The case of Iron Age Dolenjska, Slovenia.
Carola Metzner-Nebelsick
ID: 1155
‘Steppic Kurgans’ in North China: Memory, Identity, and the Historical Paradigm in Chinese Archaeology
Christine Havlicek
ID: 1173
Echoes of strength: the appropriation and transformation of images of power in Iron Age Eurasia
Timothy Taylor
ID: 848
Creating the Memory: Lay Communal Practices of Stone Stelae of Premodern China
Junfu Wong
ID: 1189
The Gamification of Memory: Accuracy, Authenticity, and Remembrance
Hanna Marie Pageau
Friday, July 08, 2022 09:20 – 10:50
Room B2 UCKO
90 min | Part 2/2: F15-08. Prehistoric kinship beyond ‘family’: concepts, scales, inference, and significanceOrganiser: Bradley E. Ensor, Stella Souvatzi
ID: 1366
Kinship through affinity? A view from the Brazilian coast
Daniela Klokler
ID: 277
Gender relations, patrilocality and relatedness at the burial ground of Nitra, Slovakia
Daniela Hofmann
ID: 189
Forgotten Pathways? New gendered mobility data from later European prehistory vis à vis the ultimate gift theorem
Samantha S. Reiter
ID: 1178
Kinship as Political Regime: Archaeology of Social Reproduction in the Pampa del Tamarugal (ca 3000–1000 BP)
González-Ramírez Andrea
ID: 490
Beyond biological bonds – Perspectives on the importance of social practices for kinship structures in Sumba (Indonesia)
Maria Wunderlich
ID: 1393
Diversity of kinships: a case study from Eastern Japanese archipelago
Chuya Hoshino
Friday, July 08, 2022 09:20 – 10:50
Room C2 CHILDE
90 min | E13-06. Historical Archaeology in South AmericaOrganiser: Mirtha Alfonso Monges, Maria Victoria Roca
ID: 1360
“Al pie de los nevados”: Archaeology of colonial landscapes associated with trade in the South Central Andes, between 16 th and 18 th centuries
Elsa Valeria Antezana Soria
ID: 1003
THE SANCTI SPÍRITUS FORT (1527-1529) AND SANTA FE LA VIEJA CITY (1573-1660). FROM THE FIRST SETTLEMENTS TO THE CONSOLIDATION OF THE COLONIAL SYSTEM IN THE RÍO DE LA PLATA
Gabriel Cocco
ID: 1376
ARCHAEOLOGY AND HISTORICAL CENTERS: THE CASE OF THE CITY OF CORRIENTES (ARGENTINA)
María Núñez Camelino
ID: 1002
THE CHURCH OF SAN JOAQUÍN AND SANTA ANA IN ITS CONTEXT: HISTORY AND ARCHAEOLOGY OF A JESUIT FOUNDATION IN PARAGUAY
Mirtha Alfonso Monges
ID: 1001
GUARANI-JESUIT MISSIONS IN SOUTH AMERICA (1609-1768): DRAWING ANALYSIS OF THE MISSION OF SAN JOSE (ARGENTINA)
María Victoria Roca
Friday, July 08, 2022 09:20 – 10:50
Room C1 KERN
90 min | Part 2/2: E14-01. Aquatic Neolithic Formations in Global PerspectiveOrganiser: Mark Hudson, Junzo Uchiyama
ID: 156
Salt Production and Marine Resource Exploitation in the Jomon
Takamune Kawashima
ID: 59
Fishing, farming and the maritime mode of production in final Neolithic/Bronze Age Japan
Mark Hudson
ID: 757
Humans and the Aquatic Resources between the VI–V Millennia B.C.: A Comparison between North Italy and Japan
Claudio Pelloli
ID: 1041
Maritime Neolithicisation at the interface of Asia and the Pacific: A view from Raja Ampat, West Papua
Dylan Gaffney
ID: 328
NEOLITHIC SETTLEMENTS OF BIRNIN KUDU AND ENVIRONS, NORTHWESTERN NIGERIA
Jonathan Aleru
Friday, July 08, 2022 09:20 – 10:50
Foyer West GIMBUTAS
90 min | Z21-19. Challenges and new approaches for protection of cultural heritage around the worldOrganiser: Emma Cunliffe, Isber Sabrine, Marika Tisucká
ID: 532
The 1954 Hague Convention: From law to practice
Emma Cunliffe
ID: 1200
Conservation Mortars for the Danube Limes in Serbia: Safeguarding the Values of Cultural Heritage
Mladen Jovičić
ID: 1226
Protection of Indigenous Knowledge (IK) and Cultural Uniqueness in Sri Lanka
Kamani Perera
ID: 1231
Saving of the code of national identity and memory in the conditions of full-scale war. Is there a chance for Ukrainian cultural and scientific heritage?
Roman Liubun
Friday, July 08, 2022 09:20 – 10:50
Lounge MONTELIUS (only virtual sessions)
75 min | C08-09. Exploring histories of collecting human remains: local and international contexts, networks and repatriation processesOrganiser: Eeva-Kristiina Harlin, Hirofumi Kato, Carl-Gösta Ojala
ID: 707
Histories of collecting and debates on repatriation and reburial of Sámi human remains in Sweden
Carl-Gösta Ojala
ID: 530
In Repatriation of the Collection of Taiwan Indigenous Relics: The Past, Present and Future
Jou-Chun Lu
ID: 1095
Ghouls and bones : repatriation of Native American Human Remains in the US and Canada
Viviane Forest-Ponthieux
ID: 1248
The Outflow of the Ainu Ancestral Remains: Historical background and its factors.
Hirofumi KATO
Friday, July 08, 2022 10:50 – 11:10
Room 1
20 min | Break
Friday, July 08, 2022 11:10 – 12:40
Room A1 NEUSTUPNÝ
90 min | Part 1/3: A02-02. Breaking Bread and Raising a Glass: Bridging Ethnoarchaeological and Archaeological Research on Food and Culinary HabitsOrganiser: John Arthur, Soultana Maria Valamoti
ID: 483
Present use and production of « metates » in Turícuaro (Michoacán, Mexico): An ethnoarchaelogical approach to deciphering the evolution of food preparation practices
Caroline Hamon
ID: 207
Feasting at the First Settlement: Bridging Ethnoarchaeology with Archaeology in the Gamo Highlands of southwestern Ethiopia
John Arthur
ID: 486
Traditional Knowledge in the Northern Ethiopian Highlands: Pathway to Understanding the Past
Laurie Nixon-Darcus
ID: 1042
Preparing and drinking beer in Africa: an ethnoarchaeological approach
Anne Mayor
ID: 1044
Identifying the different cooking practices: Contribution from the study of ethnographic pottery in West Africa
Julien VIEUGUE
Friday, July 08, 2022 11:10 – 12:40
Room B1 BINFORD
90 min | Part 1/2: F15-01. Social and symbolic significance of Neolithic housesOrganiser: Penny Bickle, Daniela Hofmann, Jan Turek
ID: 500
Unfamiliar Houses? New Reflections on Neolithic European Houses and Households
Penny Bickle
ID: 279
The enduring house – changes and continuities in domestic dwellings from the central European Neolithic
Daniela Hofmann
ID: 1188
Home, annex or pied-à-terre? Assessing the socioeconomic dimension of small-sized built environments at Neolithic Çatalhöyük
Aroa Garcia-Suarez
ID: 857
Neolithic House Patterns and Dynamic Relationality
Bradley Ensor
ID: 482
Not only domestic. In search for symbolic expressions in the Paris Basin LBK houses
Hamon Caroline
ID: 1331
Courtyard as a part of the sedentism within the Neolithic society of Khramis Didi Gora (Georgia)
Mariam Eloshvili
Friday, July 08, 2022 11:10 – 12:40
Room B2 UCKO
90 min | Part 1/3: F16-02. World Approaches to LandscapeOrganiser: Andrea Creel, James Scott Lyons, Oki Nakamura
ID: 15
Historical Ecological Landscapes and the Chaîne Opératoire
James Scott Lyons
ID: 369
The biocultural heritage of the forest. Bringing out the historical importance of a perceived marginal landscape
Eva Svensson
ID: 586
Landscape of a Pottery Production viewing from Japanese and Korean Dragon Kilns
Tomoko Nagatomo
ID: 1239
GIS-based modelling of Archaeological Landscapes. A case study from Visegrád and the Pilis region, Hungary.
Katalin Tolnai
ID: 651
Landscape of Early Horse Breeding in Japan
ISAHAYA Naoto
Friday, July 08, 2022 11:10 – 12:40
Room C2 CHILDE
90 min | Part 1/2: Z21-12. Mobility, migrations and diasporas from the perspective of world archeologiesOrganiser: Mónica Berón, Mariano Bonomo, José López Mazz, Fernado Ozorio de Almeida
ID: 1316
Between Migration and Exchange: The Koriabo pottery and the late Carib-speaking expansions across northern Amazon and the Caribbean.
Bruno de Souza Barreto
ID: 280
NEW APPROACHES TO PAST MIGRATIONS IN SOUTH AMERICAN LOWLANDS: MODELING TUPI LARGE-SCALE FLUVIAL MOVEMENTS THROUGH HYDROLOGICAL NETWORK ANALYSIS
Mariano Bonomo
ID: 1232
Paths to Monumentality in Pre-historic Eastern Amazonia: Social Network Analysis using a Spatial-temporal Approach
João Darcy de Moura Saldanha
ID: 856
Down by the River: dismantling the settlement ecology behind the dispersion of the Pocó-Açutuba Tradition producers in Amazonia (1000 BCE-300 CE) CE).
Thiago Kater
ID: 1343
Cultural dynamics in southwestern Amazonia in light of the archaeological record
Carla Jaimes Betancourt
Friday, July 08, 2022 11:10 – 12:40
Room C1 KERN
90 min | Part 1/2: D12-07. Looking Back, Looking Forward: 40 years of repatriationOrganiser: Randall McGuire, C. Timothy McKeown, Yuka Shichiza, Paul Tapsell
ID: 450
Return to Sender: Illicit acquisitions from Uluru to pounamu, may we sleep in peace
Paora Tapsell
ID: 157
Recent Developments in the Treatment and Repatriation of Ainu Ancestral Remains within University Collections in Japan
Mayumi Okada
ID: 299
Considering the Potential Application of Ancient DNA Research in Repatriation
Yuka Shichiza
ID: 1317
Community bioarchaeology and its place in repatriation
Michael Westaway
ID: 1241
The Benin Dialogue Group: A Discourse around Repatriation, Duplicity and Encyclopedic Museums.
Zacharys Gundu
Friday, July 08, 2022 11:10 – 12:40
Foyer West GIMBUTAS
90 min | Z21-07. Developers and Archaeology: Global PerspectivesOrganiser: Caleb Adebayo Folorunso, Charles Le Quesne
ID: 748
Modern Development and Archaeology- Australian Example
Anita Yousif
ID: 602
GRASCA: new opportunities resulting from developer-funded archaeology in Sweden
Cornelius Holtorf
ID: 485
Environmental preservation of archaeological monuments and sustainable development in India – Saving the Taj and Taj Trapezium zone
Surendra Pachauri
ID: 756
“Just ask!” How Improved Communication Could Benefit Indigenous Heritage Management
Charina Knutson
ID: 1148
Progress on the Heian-kyo Site’s Rescue Excavation and Challenges for its Future
Mikiharu Takeuch
ID: 289
Trailing the Blades of Bulldozers: Developer Funded Archaeology in Benin, Nigeria
CULTURAL HERITAGE OF THE SWAHILI COAST OF TANZANIA – A CASE STUDY OF KILWA KISIWANI AND ZANZIBAR STONE TOWN
ALTAF MUKHI
ID: 119
Archaeological Heritage Management in Central Africa: the present situation, current issues and future challenges
Francois Ngouoh
ID: 533
Closing the ‘Back Way’. Heritage Management and Migration in The Gambia
Hassoum Ceesay
ID: 1387
National Museums in East African Heritage Management
Emmanuel Ndiema
Friday, July 08, 2022 12:40 – 14:00
Room A1 NEUSTUPNÝ
80 min | Break
Friday, July 08, 2022 14:00 – 15:00
Room A1 NEUSTUPNÝ
60 min | Part 2/3: A02-02. Breaking Bread and Raising a Glass: Bridging Ethnoarchaeological and Archaeological Research on Food and Culinary HabitsOrganiser: John Arthur, Soultana Maria Valamoti
ID: 678
Traditional alcohol making methods and their implications in Chinese archaeology
Li Liu
ID: 1121
Pottery, plants, and people: Early Neolithic culinary practices in the north frontier of China
Yahui He
ID: 1026
Acorn processing in ancient and modern China
Jiajing Wang
ID: 1025
Beyond Vessels and Edibles: Understanding the Culinary Tradition through Ethnography at Rann of Kutch Gujarat, India
Ahana Ghosh
Friday, July 08, 2022 14:00 – 15:00
Room B1 BINFORD
60 min | Part 2/2: F15-01. Social and symbolic significance of Neolithic housesOrganiser: Penny Bickle, Daniela Hofmann, Jan Turek
ID: 1257
Neolithic long houses as symbolic archetypes of the Copper Age long barrows
Jan Turek
ID: 1259
Houses of the dead as ancestral shrines: New evidence of Copper Age long barrows in Bohemia
Petr Krištuf
ID: 1326
New investigations of Aboriginal houses and village sites in Mithaka Country, Central Australia
Michael Westaway
ID: 1098
The evolution of houses, households and social behaviors in an ancient Iroquoian community
Christian Gates St-Pierre
Friday, July 08, 2022 14:00 – 15:00
Room B2 UCKO
60 min | Part 2/3: F16-02. World Approaches to LandscapeOrganiser: Andrea Creel, James Scott Lyons, Oki Nakamura
ID: 800
On the Urban Settlement Landscape of the Kofun Period (3rd-5th Centuries) in the Nara Basin, Japan
Taisuke Aoyagi
ID: 307
Occupying the sea, navigating by the land: The urbanization processes in Iberia by the Phoenicians
Rodrigo Araújo de Lima
ID: 652
Demographic Shifts and Emergence of Ritual Landscapes during the Jomon Period in Northern Japan, 6000 to 2500 cal BP
Oki Nakamura
ID: 1115
Ritual seascapes in Southern Brazil
Daniela Klokler
Friday, July 08, 2022 14:00 – 15:00
Room C2 CHILDE
60 min | Part 2/2: Z21-12. Mobility, migrations and diasporas from the perspective of world archeologiesOrganiser: Mónica Berón, Mariano Bonomo, José López Mazz, Fernado Ozorio de Almeida
ID: 373
Using Oxygen 18 istotopic evidence to explore changes in human mobility during Inca times in the Atacama desert.
Francisco Garrido
ID: 202
Stories of mobility, diasporas and ethnogenesis in central Argentina
Monica Berón
ID: 1404
From Terra Ignota to historical landscapes in Patagonia. Practices, places and roads in peopling process
Laura Miotti
ID: 455
The presence of Guaraní groups in the current Uruguayan territory
Rocío María López Cabral
Friday, July 08, 2022 14:00 – 15:00
Room C1 KERN
60 min | Part 2/2: D12-07. Looking Back, Looking Forward: 40 years of repatriationOrganiser: Randall McGuire, C. Timothy McKeown, Yuka Shichiza, Paul Tapsell
ID: 154
Setting Things Right: The Massacre in The Sierra Mazatan and Indigenous Archaeology in Sonora, México
Randall McGuire
ID: 379
Illegal trafficking of Native American human remains and cultural items under the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act
C. Timothy McKeown
ID: 598
A Case-Specific Approach: Exploring Repatriation Practice in Canada.
Chelsea H. Meloche
Friday, July 08, 2022 14:00 – 15:00
Foyer West GIMBUTAS
60 min | Part 1/2: C07-04. How Should We Carry Out a Public Archaeology Project? Towards a Methodology for Public Archaeology in the context of DevelopmentOrganiser: Agathe Dupeyron, Daniel Dante Saucedo Segami
ID: 1330
Creating a learning space: Lessons from two decades of archaeological research in the Dewil Valley, El Nido, Palawan, Philippines
Llenel de Castro
ID: 1332
Taking Dirangen’s Axes. Contestation of Chorotega Heritage in Nicaraguan Archaeotourism Development
Paul Edward Montgomery Ramírez
ID: 1359
Workshops and guided tours at the Museum of Precolumbian and Indigenous Art (MAPI), Uruguay: tools to get the community involved.
Elena Saccone
Friday, July 08, 2022 15:00 – 15:20
Room A1 NEUSTUPNÝ
20 min | Break
Friday, July 08, 2022 15:20 – 16:35
Room A1 NEUSTUPNÝ
75 min | Part 3/3: A02-02. Breaking Bread and Raising a Glass: Bridging Ethnoarchaeological and Archaeological Research on Food and Culinary HabitsOrganiser: John Arthur, Soultana Maria Valamoti
ID: 308
An Unusual Ethnoarchaeology for Interpreting a Culinary Practice in Prehistoric Southern Vietnam
Michelle Eusebio
ID: 853
Understanding ancient cuisine through an ethnoarchaeobotany of traditional plant food preparations: case studies from Greece
Soultana Maria Valamoti
ID: 1266
Meal for everyone (and even more)! Prestige and opulence revealed through the funerary offerings’ tableware in the Late Hallstatt necropolis from Valea Stânii, Romania
Măndescu Dragoș Alexandru
ID: 221
Dreg deposits and domestic production: Assessing the ubiquity of chicha production in the Wari Empire
Donna Nash
ID: 293
Decoding Wari Beer: Ethnoarchaeological and Archaeochemical Contributions to the Archaeology of State Sponsored Brewing in Ancient Peru
Patrick Ryan Williams
Friday, July 08, 2022 15:20 – 16:35
Room B1 BINFORD
75 min | Part 1/2: C07-10. For people, places and the past: Transnational perspectives on the impact on volunteers of archaeological participation within the places where they liveOrganiser: Carenza Lewis, Arkadiusz Marciniak, Heleen van Londen, Pavel Vařeka
ID: 703
Engaging descendant communities: a community archaeology approach in Igbo-Ukwu, Nigeria
Kingsley Daraojimba
ID: 1085
Revealing nomadic heritage: community archaeology in the foothills of the Pamir Mountains (Ak-Dzhar, Kyrgyzstan)
Pavel Vařeka
ID: 1253
Archaeological participation and wellbeing: capturing the impact of participation in place-based archaeological excavations on local residents in the UK and Netherlands.
Carenza Lewis
ID: 1007
How do interventions using heritage-based activities, impact on mental health and wellbeing: an analysis of community led archaeological outcomes
Richard (Dickie) Bennett
Friday, July 08, 2022 15:20 – 16:35
Room B2 UCKO
75 min | Part 3/3: F16-02. World Approaches to LandscapeOrganiser: Andrea Creel, James Scott Lyons, Oki Nakamura
ID: 762
Changes in the Settlement Landscape and Awareness of Settlement Residents during the Jomon Period, Japan
Toru TATEISHI
ID: 1219
Where do the dead go? Spiritscapes and the tripartite scheme of the Rites of Passage in past and contemporary hunter gatherers in Colombia.
Juan Pablo Ospina
ID: 701
The relationship between land use and topographical change in the Yayoi Period on the Osaka Plain
Tomohiro Inoue
ID: 850
Ritual Movement, Roads, and Senses of Liminality: Landscapes of Pilgrimage in the Southern Levantine Drylands
Andrea Creel
Friday, July 08, 2022 15:20 – 16:35
Room C2 CHILDE
75 min | Part 1/2: D12-09. Engaging indigenous communities in Africa with archaeological researchOrganiser: Paul Lane, Tilman Lenssen-Erz, Alma Nankela, Eleftheria Paliou
ID: 1076
Indigenous knowledge and Archaeoinformatics: modelling forager mobility and behaviour
Oliver Vogels
ID: 1066
Fieldwork amongst small-scale, agriculturist, subsistence farmers in Eswatini
Thembi Russell
ID: 1206
Building the ‘House of Two Horns’: A long-term perspective on collaborating with the local community at Musawwarat es-Sufra (Sudan)
Cornelia Kleinitz
Friday, July 08, 2022 15:20 – 16:35
Room C1 KERN
75 min | Part 1/2: A01-01. The artists behind the art: Rock art created by known artistsChair: Ndukuyakhe Ndlovu
ID: 255
Perspectives of Human life History: from Paintings & Graffiti of the Early Iron Age South India
s. Rama Krishna Pisipaty
ID: 344
Melina: Knowledge and memory as a namkungwi in Malawi
Leslie F. Zubieta
ID: 9
A new archaeological sequence from Liang Jon, East Kalimantan, Borneo
Tim Maloney
Friday, July 08, 2022 15:20 – 16:35
Foyer West GIMBUTAS
75 min | Part 2/2: C07-04. How Should We Carry Out a Public Archaeology Project? Towards a Methodology for Public Archaeology in the context of DevelopmentOrganiser: Agathe Dupeyron, Daniel Dante Saucedo Segami
ID: 1300
Architecture and city of the colleges of the community of Japanese descent. Case study in Metropolitan Lima (1899-1945)
José Hayakawa
ID: 1298
Social Memory and Public Archaeology: Challenges of Connecting the Past and the Present in Peru
Daniel Dante Saucedo Segami
ID: 1289
Comparing the impacts of “Archaeology for development” projects and stakeholder participation in three Andean communities
Agathe Dupeyron
ID: 1378
Making the Past Public: Challenges and Possibilities for Archaeological Collections
Stefani Mamani Escobar
Friday, July 08, 2022 15:20 – 16:35
Lounge MONTELIUS (only virtual sessions)
75 min | C09-03. Archaeology as an Engine for Sustainability in the Countries of the Maya WorldOrganiser: Ivan Batún, Israel Herrera, Lilia Lizama, Kennedy Obombo
ID: 25
Moving Mexican Archaeology towards a Democratic Practice: The Archaeologists Without Borders of the Maya World
Adolfo Iván Batún Alpuche
ID: 393
Analysis and Identification of Sustainable Public Policy for Management of Cultural and Natural Heritage in the Maya Region in Line with the Sustainable Development Goals
Kennedy Magio
ID: 1127
A proposal for a Master Plan of Sustainable Archaeological Sites in Mexico
Fernando EnseñatLilia Lizama
ID: 1191
IS THERE ROOM FOR PRIVATE INVESTMENT IN CULTURAL HERITAGE IN MEXICO?
Jose Israel Herrera
ID: 1223
Archaeological research and its legacy in the Guatemalan
Claudia Quintanilla
Friday, July 08, 2022 16:35 – 16:55
Room A1 NEUSTUPNÝ
20 min | Break
Friday, July 08, 2022 16:55 – 17:55
Room A1 NEUSTUPNÝ
60 min | Part 1/2 WAC Plenary #4: Peter Ucko Memorial Lecture
ID: 1446
The Peter Ucko Memorial Lecture for the Ninth World Archaeological Congress, Prague 2022
Weber Ndoro
Friday, July 08, 2022 16:55 – 17:55
Room B1 BINFORD
60 min | Part 2/2: C07-10. For people, places and the past: Transnational perspectives on the impact on volunteers of archaeological participation within the places where they liveOrganiser: Carenza Lewis, Arkadiusz Marciniak, Heleen van Londen, Pavel Vařeka
ID: 1270
Community archaeology in practice. The Polish experience in the CARE project
Patrycja Filipowicz
ID: 1050
“Memory of the Freedom Fights”: Ten Years of Youth Summer Camps and Community-Based Archaeology in Lithuania
Gediminas Petrauskas
ID: 1293
Comparative analysis of the impact of participative community archaeology in Europe, Africa and Asia
Carenza Lewis
Friday, July 08, 2022 16:55 – 17:55
Room C2 CHILDE
60 min | Part 2/2: D12-09. Engaging indigenous communities in Africa with archaeological researchOrganiser: Paul Lane, Tilman Lenssen-Erz, Alma Nankela, Eleftheria Paliou
ID: 1171
What makes up a community in a Jola village in northern Guinea-Bissau? Methodological challenges of doing archaeological research in a plural religious setting
Angelo Vasco
ID: 1022
The approach of community archaeology in the Soninke terroir of eastern Senegal: the perspective of a global history for the benefit of the impartiality of the historiography of the trajectory of the population of the zone.
fode diakho
ID: 1009
Appropriate the past! Resilience culture of the African Igbo
Rita Uju Onah
Friday, July 08, 2022 16:55 – 17:55
Room C1 KERN
60 min | Part 2/2: A01-01. The artists behind the art: Rock art created by known artistsChair: Ndukuyakhe Ndlovu
ID: 343
Junggayi Caring for Country: Ethnographic lessons for archaeologists from Aboriginal rock artists (Part 2)
Claire Smith
ID: 582
Rock art behind the artists or artists as the new rock art (re)creators
Andrzej Rozwadowski
ID: 371
Feasting, initiation and warriorhood: Moran rock art in northwestern Kenya
Peter Skoglund
Friday, July 08, 2022 17:55 – 18:05
Room A1 NEUSTUPNÝ
10 min | Break
Friday, July 08, 2022 18:05 – 19:05
Room A1 NEUSTUPNÝ
60 min | Part 2/2 WAC Plenary #4: – How WAC should react to ongoing and future wars and conflicts, and other challenges