#wirtualnemuzeum Biskupin
We invite you to the museum virtually!
We invite you to the museum virtually!
Terramara di Montale Archaeological Park and Open-Air Museum.
Kernavė was a medieval capital of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania.
These 3D videos were commissioned by the Kernavė State Cultural Reserve and are used in the Kernavė Archaeological Site Museum.
New challenges, new beginnings. At the opening of our educational hub, Pottery Center Bahor as a member of EXARC and the holder of the Heritera brand will prepare an archaeological/pottery time travel. The grand opening will be accompanied by Max Zimani on clay instruments and African drums.
The Museu de Prehistòria preserves much of the material legacy of the towns that occupied the Valencian territory. The recovery of this important heritage has been possible thanks to the excavations that the Prehistoric Research Service (SIP) has carried out for more than 80 years.
The country's history is more exciting than ever! The State Archaeological Museum shows their legacies. With around 10,000 selected exhibits, the permanent exhibition presents a fascinating overview of Brandenburg's 130,000-year-old cultural history.
I am an archaeologist from Romania, and I am specialised in prehistoric archaeology (focussed on Bronze Age), the archaeology of salt and experimental archaeology.
The Institute of Archaeology, Nicolaus Copernicus University in Toruń is one of the oldest research centres in Poland dealing with experimental archaeology. The first studies of this type realised by our researchers were published in the 1970s.
Since then, experimental archaeology took an important place in different types of scientific projects carried out at our Institute, associated with, for example, medieval metallurgy or textiles. However, we place a special emphasis on the use of the experimental methods in research on prehistory, particularly, the Stone Ages. Most of the work realised of this type is aimed at the creation of experimental tools that we use as a comparative material during traceological analysis of the prehistoric artefacts.
Salima Ikram is a Distinguished University Professor of Egyptology at The American University in Cairo and has worked as an archaeologist in Turkey, Sudan, Greece and the United States.
She holds a MPhil in Museology and Egyptian archaeology and a PhD in Egyptian archaeology from Cambridge University. She has participated in several archaeological missions and has directed the Animal Mummy Project, the North Kharga Darb Ain Amur Survey, as well as the Amenmesse Mission of KV10 and KV63 in the Valley of the Kings. Her research interests are vast, spanning from archaeozoology and funerary archaeology to rock art, ethnoarchaeology and museology.
My name is Ronja Lau, I studied prehistoric archaeology at the Freie Universität Berlin and since my Bachelor degree I'm dealing with textile archaeology and experiments concerning textile research.
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2321 KA Leiden
The Netherlands
Phone: +(31) 6 40263273
Website: EXARC.net
Email: info@exarc.net
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