Below you will find the current Schedule of Academic Sessions, arranged so that each day reads down the page. The start times for each element are shown across the top of the page.Refreshment breaks of approximately half an hour will be held between 1030 and 1130 hrs (timing varies between sessions).
The break for lunch is 1300 - 1400 hrs daily.
As well as the sessions listed here, the following events are also scheduled:
Friday 17th September:
from 1400 hrs: Poster Presentations in the Atrium display area, Poole House, Talbot Campus
from 1400 - 1700 hrs, Public Open AfternoonSaturday 18th September:
from 1530 hrs: EAA Annual Business Meeting, in EAA-01. All EAA members are urged to attend.For details of the week's other activities, please see the Programme of Events.
Thursday 16th September Friday 17th September Saturday 18th September Academic Session 1 Academic Session 2 Academic Session 3 Academic Session 4 Academic Session 5 Academic Session 6 Academic Session 7 Academic Session 8 Academic Session 9 Academic Session10 Academic Session11 0900 1100 1400 1600 0900 1100 1400 1600 0900 1100 1400 EAA-01 II o
Hermeneutics, phenomenology and contemporary social theoryIII a
The archaeology of shamanismIII s
Rock-art and views of the worldEAA-02 I a
Digging in the dirtII a
Landscape archaeology: New approaches to field methodology and analysisIII L
Beyond stone and bone: Recent research, European PalaeolithicEAA-03 I h
Contract archaeologyII L
The significance of colour in archaeological researchII c
Visualization and digital imaging in archaeoogyEAA-04 II k
Time as an archaeological dimensionIII k
The archaeology of drinkingI d
Illicit trade in antiquities and cultural materialI n
Liberty and archaeologyII j
Origins research at the turn of the millenniumEAA-05 I b
Linear route assessmentIII p
Prehistoric ceramics in EuropeIII b
Metal mining and early metallurgy in EuropeEAA-06 III f
Wariors in the archaeological recordII g
The meanings of monumentsIII e
Trade and clay lamps in the Graeco-Roman worldII i
Current problems of Eurasion nomadismII h
Muting archaeologyEAA-07 II m
Ethnoarchaeology and its transfersII t
Archaeologists and the cultural landscapeI x
Reasearch and quality management systems in rescue archaeologyII v
Archaeo-
astronomyEAA-08 II n
The history of archaeologyI r
Setting standards for European archaeologyI m
Professional training in archaeologyI f The ethics of excavating human remains EAA-09 III i
Prehistoric & later field systemsin Atlantic EuropeI c
Publishing archaeology in thenew millenniumII u
Ancient biomolucules: Archaeology in the test tubeI j
Intellectual tourismEAA-10 II x
Ancient people and placesIII o
Between the Caucasus and the DanubeIII d
The Caucasus - crossroads between Europe and AsiaII p
Archaeological sensibilitiesEAA-11 I o
E U funding progrmmes & how to benefit from themII s
Urban archaeology, urban or town-planning studies?II w
The archaeology of nationalimII r
Arch. investigation of the woodland of east EuropeI v
Sustainability of archaeological parksEAA-12 II e
Forensic archaeology: The European perspectiveII d
Archaeology of the present ...III c
Metrology of classical and medieval periodsIII g
Medieval settlement and land useEAA-13 I w
Archaeology in schoolsIII m
Archaeologies of industrial labourI g
Local government in heritage managementI s
New approaches to heritage presentationEAA-14 III j
Knowing Novgorod: A case study in archaeological collaborationII b
Archaeology and buildingsIII h
FragmentationEAA-15 II q
The relationship between objectsI t
Aerial archaeologyI q
The preservation and reuse of digital dataI p
In-situ preservation and mitigationI u
Archaeology in storeEAA-17 I k
Public prehistories: Engaging stories ...
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