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Archaeologists (3)
Hellenistic (9)
Organizations (1)
Roman (30)
Web Pages
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  Virtual Ani, Armenia http://www.virtualani.freeserve.co.uk/
Interactive map of the deserted medieval city brings up thumbnail photographs and key facts on each building. With brief history, account of its rediscovery and comments on recent excavations and restoration.
  Dangerous Archaeology http://www.umich.edu/~kelseydb/Exhibits/DangerousArchaeology/MainDangerous.html
An exhibit about Francis Willey Kelsey's work in Armenia in 1919 to 1920, particularly on ancient habitation in Cilicia.
  The Rock Carvings of the Ghegham Mountain Range http://www.iatp.am/resource/artcult/rockart/geghama/index.htm
A survey of Armenian rock art with descriptions, images, and references.
  The Rock-Carvings of Syunik http://www.iatp.am/resource/artcult/rockart/ughtasar/index.htm
Images and an article describing the carvings.
  Jews in Medieval Armenia http://www.khazaria.com/armenia/armenian-jews.html
A bibliography of sources on the discovery of a Jewish cemetery in Armenia.
  Dr. Stone Expedition in Armenia http://www.churcharmenia.com/stone_expedition.html
Videos, images, and reports from the excavation in Armenia showing Jewish tombstones from the 13th and early 14th centuries.
  Project ArAGATS - The Archaeology and Geography of Ancient Transcaucasian States http://acc.spc.uchicago.edu/~atsmith/Pages/Aragats.html
A joint Armenian-American archaeological research project to understand the transformation of early Transcaucasian societies from small pastoral and agricultural communities during the 3rd millennium B.C. into organized provinces of empires less than two thousand years later.
  Prof. Stone visits the ARC and lectures in Detroit http://www.umd.umich.edu/dept/armenian/news/stone2.html
Nearly 200 interested people, both from the Armenian American and the Jewish American communities, attended a lecture by Dr Michael E. Stone on February 4, 2002 on "Stones from the River: The Lost Jews of Armenia."
  Exploration and Survey of Pleistocene Hominid Sites in Armenia and Karabagh http://antiquity.ac.uk/ProjGall/King/king.html
Recent discoveries in the Caucasus region indicate that hominids occupied this area over a period of nearly two million years. The earliest hominids outside Africa are known from the Georgian site of Dmanisi in the southern Caucasus.
  Prehistoric Sites in Northern Armenia http://antiquity.ac.uk/ProjGall/dolukhanov/index.html
An intensive field survey in Northern Armenia. Antiquity Vol 78 No 301 September 2004.

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