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1955 in archaeology

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The year 1955 in archaeology involved some significant events.

Explorations

  • Thor Heyerdahl organizes the Norwegian Archaeological Expedition to Easter Island (continues to 1956).
  • Start of extensive discoveries at the Anglo-Saxon cemetery on Loveden Hill in Lincolnshire, England.

Excavations

  • September - Gustav Riek begins systematic excavations at Brillenhöhle (continues to 1963).
  • A. C. O'Dell begins excavations on St Ninian's Isle (continues to 1958).
  • Alexander Sahinian begins excavations at Etchmiadzin Cathedral in Armenia (continues to 1956).
  • A. Ledyard Smith makes the first archaeological investigation of the Mayan site of Chutixtiox in Guatemala.
  • Archaeological Survey of India begins excavations at Nagda chalcolithic site (continues to 1957).
  • A Hebrew University team led by Yigal Yadin begins excavations at Tel Hazor (continues to 1958).
  • Excavation of Qujialing culture type site in China begins (continues to 1957).

Publications

  • Cyril Fox - Offa's Dyke: a Field Survey of the Western Frontier Works of Mercia in the Seventh and Eighth Centuries AD.
  • Ivan D. Margary - Roman Roads in Britain, vol. 1.
  • I. A. Richmond - Roman Britain (Penguin Books).

Finds

  • May 19 - Greenock Coin Hoard in Scotland.
  • Pesse canoe, the oldest known boat, in the Netherlands.
  • First remains of Paranthropus boisei — teeth of Olduvai Hominin (OH) 3 — unearthed in Olduvai Gorge, Tanzania.

Miscellaneous

  • October - The term "Industrial archaeology" is popularised.

Births

  • January 1 - Mary Beard, English Classicist.
  • April 20 - Svante Pääbo, Swedish paleogeneticist.
  • September 30 - Martin Millett, English Classical archaeologist.

Deaths

  • January 1 - Arthur C. Parker, part-Seneca American archaeologist and ethnographer of Native Americans in the United States (b. 1881).
  • March 31 - Thomas Dunbabin, Australian-born Classical archaeologist and Greek Resistance leader (b. 1911).
  • August 17 - Edward Thurlow Leeds, English archaeologist of the Anglo-Saxons (b. 1877).
  • October 29 - Alexander Keiller, British archaeologist and benefactor (b. 1889).
  • December 15 - V. E. Nash-Williams, Welsh archaeologist (b. 1897).
  • December 25 - Thomas J. Preston, Jr., American archaeologist (b. 1862).

References

References

  1. {{PastScape. (2015)
  2. "Offa's Dyke: A Field Survey of the Western Frontier-Works of Mercia in the Seventh and Eighth Centuries A.D.".
  3. Tobias, P. V.. (2006). "The First Humans – Origin and Early Evolution of the Genus ''Homo''". Springer.
  4. Rix, Michael. (October 1955). "Industrial Archaeology". The Amateur Historian.
  5. "Papers of Edward Thurlow Leeds".
  6. "Keiller, Alexander (1889-1955), businessman and archaeologist".
  7. "Nash-Williams, Victor Erle".
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