World Archaeology at the Pitt Rivers Museum: a characterization D. Hicks and A. Stevenson (eds) 2013. World Archaeology at the Pitt Rivers Museum: a characterization. Oxford: Archaeopress We are delighted to announce the publication of a new 280,000-word overview of the world archaeological collections of the Pitt Rivers Museum, University of Oxford. Details are below. The book is published simultaneously in hard copy, and online in open access form - http://www.prm.ox.ac.uk/world.html The volume is the product of a collections-based research project - Characterizing the World Archaeology Collections of the Pitt Rivers Museum -that sought to develop the first overview of the range and research potential of the Museum's world archaeology collections. World Archaeology at the Pitt Rivers Museum: a characterization introduces the range, history and significance of the archaeological collections of the Pitt Rivers Museum, and sets out priorities for future research into the collection. Through 29 newly-commissioned essays written by a specialist team, the volume explores more than 136,000 artefacts from 145 countries, from the Stone Age to the modern period, and from England to Easter Island. Pioneering a new approach in museum studies - which the project calls "characterization" - this landmark volume is an essential reference work for archaeologists around the world, and a unique introduction to the archaeological collections of one of the world’s most famous museums The hard copy of the book can be ordered from Archaeopress here - http://www.archaeopress.com/ArchaeopressShop/Public/defaultAll.asp?QuickSearch=9781905739585 Table of Contents 1 Characterizing the World Archaeology Collections of the Pitt Rivers Museum. Dan Hicks SECTION I: AFRICA 2 Stone Age Sub-Saharan Africa. Peter Mitchell 3 Kenyan Stone Age: the Louis Leakey Collection. Ceri Shipton 4 Stone Age North Africa. Nick Barton 5 Egypt and Sudan: Mesolithic to Early Dynastic Period. Alice Stevenson 6 Egypt and Sudan: Old Kingdom to Late Period. Elizabeth Frood 7 Greco-Roman Egypt. Christina Riggs 8 Later Holocene Africa. Paul Lane SECTION II: EUROPE 9 Palaeolithic Britain. Alison Roberts 10 Palaeolithic Continental Europe. Alison Roberts and Nick Barton 11 Later Prehistoric and Roman Europe. Joshua Pollard and Dan Hicks 12 Post-Roman Europe. Eleanor Standley, Dan Hicks and Alice Forward 13 Oxfordshire. Matthew Nicholas and Dan Hicks 14 Neolithic and Bronze Age Malta and Italy. Simon Stoddart 15 The Aegean and Cyprus. Yannis Galanakis and Dan Hicks 16 Iron Age and Roman Italy. Zena Kamash, Lucy Shipley, Yannis Galanakis and Stella Skaltsa SECTION III: THE AMERICAS 17 South America. Bill Sillar and Dan Hicks 18 Central America. Elizabeth Graham, Dan Hicks and Alice Stevenson 19 The Caribbean. Dan Hicks and Jago Cooper 20 North America. Dan Hicks and Michael Petraglia SECTION IV: ASIA 21 Asia and the Middle East. Dan Hicks 22 The Levant: Palestine, Israel and Jordan. Bill Finlayson 23 India and Sri Lanka. Dan Hicks, Michael Petraglia and Nicole Boivin 24 Japan. Alice Stevenson, Fumiko Ohinata and Simon Kaner 25 China. Lukas Nickel 26 Myanmar and Malaysia. Huw Barton SECTION V: OCEANIA 27 Australia and Oceania. Dan Hicks 28 New Zealand. Yvonne Marshall 29 Easter Island and Pitcairn Island. Dan Hicks, Sue Hamilton, Mike Seager Thomas and Ruth Whitehouse .................................. Dr Dan Hicks MIfA, FSA School of Archaeology/Pitt Rivers Museum, University of Oxford web: http://oxford.academia.edu/DanHicks twitter: https://twitter.com/DrDanHicks blog: http://weweremodern.blogspot.co.uk/