Contents
From the editor......
Since the issuing of the last MEMBERS DIRECTORY, we have grown enormously! We now number 227 members in 20 countries around the world. Several members are now regularly involved in contributing material or performing tasks for EAANetwork. These are:
General Treasurer: Dr. Don Wagner, Needham Research Institute, Cambridge
North American Treasurer: Prof. Sarah Nelson, Dept of Anthropology, University of Denver
North American EAANouncements producer: Dr. Cathy D'Andrea, Dept of Anthropology, Simon Fraser University
Japanese EAANnouncements producer and treasurer: Prof. Hideo KONDO, Dept of Archaeology, Tokai University
Korean EAANnouncements producer and treasurer: Dr. In-sook LEE
European EAANnouncements producer: Dr. WANG Tao, Dept of Art & Archaeology, SOAS, University of London
China Round-up Editor: Mr. Francis Allard, Dept of Anthropology, University of Pittsburgh
Book Review Editor: Mr. Simon Kaner, Dept of Archaeology, University of Cambridge
General Tasks: Mr. Josh Wright, Dept of Archaeology, University of Cambridge
I would like to take this opportunity to thank those named above and all of you out there who
have actively involved yourselves in the work of EAAN. Also, special thanks to Prof. Nathan Sivin,
who set up the eaan listserver. It is now up and running, and any of you who have email addresses
can converse on-line by sending the message: subscribe eaan to: lstsrv@ccat.sas.upenn.edu
It is not sufficient for EAANetwork to just keep getting bigger and bigger, however. That would be
resting on our laurels, and besides, the tasks of communicating with all of you has become an
unwieldly task for the editor. Now that we have reached a critical mass, it is proposed that we turn
EAANetwork into a formal academic association with periodic conferences and a journal. Formalisation
will spread the workload more evenly, and involve yet more people in the decision-making processes.
Thus, your editor is convening a meeting in Hawaii, in April 1996, to transform EAANetwork into such
a formal organisation.
In preparation for the Hawaii meeting, we need your input! Enclosed is a form for you to fill out
and return by February 1st. Please give us your time and thoughts so that we can meet your needs and
expectations. If you want to be more involved, please promote yourself to positions of authority! We
need active and dedicated staff to continue to provide information flow and opportunities for
personal education and scholarly improvement. The spring newsletter will contain a roster of
nominations for positions in the new association which we will expect you to vote on.
Please think about the proposals and write your responses on the enclosed pull-out form. If you have further suggestions on any of the suggestions, be sure to include them on the form.
Announcing a two-day
EAANetwork CONFERENCE
10-11 April 1996
Honolulu, Hawaii
in conjunction with the 48th AAS Meetings
Proposed schedule
10 April
am Panel
pm Panel
eve Business Meeting
11 April
am Panel
pm Panel
eve AAS Archaeology Session
PANELS will be organised to deal with topics on a pan-East Asian basis in a
cross-regional, comparative perspective. All papers should discuss the given topic with reference to
at least two of the East Asian countries.
Do you have a topic to suggest for a panel?
Would you be interested in organising a panel?
Please reply on the enclosed sheet.
BUSINESS MEETING-at this meeting, EAANetwork will be upgraded into a full-fledged academic association.
ACCOMMODATION can be booked under the AAS scheme or independently. Forms will be sent out later.
TRANSPORTATION-the designated travel agent for the AAS meetings will provide the lowest fares within North America. No grants can be given to individuals for meeting attendance. Arrival on the evening of April 9th is advised.
CONFERENCE FEE: US $50, required of all attendees including paper-givers and panel organisers and potential officers.
TO each EAANmember:
In order to organise this conference and form a new association, we urge you to contribute your
nominations for officers and suggestions for panels and paper titles, etc. on the enclosed pull-out
form. These suggestions will be collated and presented in the EAANnouncements Spring issue next
March. This will be your association; we need your input. EAANetwork has outgrown its scope as a
one-person operation. Its current growth pattern is unsustainable unless more people get actively
involved. So let's have you join in! Welcome....and Help!
Formalising EAANetwork
It is time for EAANetwork to formalise itself and provide a permanent worldwide forum for the investigation and discussion of East Asian archaeology.
The Founder of EAANetwork calls for the election of officers who will be responsible, firstly for drafting a constitution for the new academic association, and secondly for the day-to-day operation of the association. It is proposed that the association start with the following officers and council members (18 total):
Elected officers (trained primarily as archaeologists):
President
Secretary
Treasurer
Non-elected officers:
Editor of newsletter
Editor of journal
Next conference organiser
Elected council members (may be resident outside their country of origin):
2 citizens of North America
2 citizens of European countries
2 citizens of Austral-asian countries
2 citizens of Japan
2 citizens of Korea
2 citizens of China
It is proposed, subject to being written into the constitution, that:
1) the officers and half of the council members are to be elected in 1994; the other half of the
council in 1996. It is suggested they serve 4-year terms, with elections of council members thus
staggered every two years;
2) all officers may stand for re-election (i.e. no term limitation);
3) all elections be held by postal ballot, coordinated by the elected secretary;
4) EAANnouncements should continue to serve as the newsletter of the association and that its editor
serve as a non-elected officer;
5) the newly proposed journal of East Asian archaeology serve as the association's journal and that
its editor serve as a non-elected officer;
6) a major association meeting be held every four years in alternation with IPPA ;
7) the venue of the association meeting rotate among North America (1996), Europe (2000), and
Austral-asia (2004), etc.;
8) in the three years between major meetings, local meetings should be held in East Asia, rotating
between Japan (1997, 2001, etc.), Korea (1998, 2002, etc.), and China (1999, 2003, etc.);
9) a Business Meeting will be held at each major association meeting;
10) all current officers and council members should be able to attend the Business Meeting;
11) dues to the association should finance the newsletter but the journal subscription be kept
separate;
12) the next conference organiser be chosen/volunteer 6 years in advance in order for them to attend
the conference and associated Business Meeting preceding theirs;
13) a quorum at a Business Meeting consist of12 members: at least 2 elected officers, 5 council
members, and 5 association members (including non-elected officers);
14) registration on EAANetwork be transferred into eligibility for association membership, with
future qualifications for membership to be decided by the Council.
Index to NOTEWORTHIES section of EAANouncements, schedule
| Feb | June | Oct | |
| 1990 | 1 | 2 | |
| 1991 | 3 | 4 | 5 |
| 1993 | 6 | 7 | 8 |
| 1994 | 9 | 10 | 11 |
| 1995 | 12 | 13 | 14 |
EAANnouncements 7 & 14 have no Noteworthies
1-1. CHANG (Chinese History and Archaeology Networking Group)
1-2. First Emperor Video
2-1. Origins of Rice Agriculture
2-2. Registration of Significant Earth Structures
3-1. Grants Received
3-2. Womens Studies
3-3. Ancient Chinese Text Database Project
3-4. Independent Scholars of South Asia
3-5. Kommission für Allgemeine und vergleichende Archäologie
3-6. Institute of Archeo-Replica, Tokyo
3-7. T.T. Tsui Gallery of Chinese Art
4-1. The British Museum Galleries
4-2. Early China
4-3. Korean gallery in the royal victoria & albert museum
4-4. Grants Received
4-5. University of Arizona Climatic History Project
4-6. China House Gallery exhibit
4-7. CSCPRC Initiative in Archaeology
4-8. Independent Scholars of Asia Newsletter
4-9. FMF Summer Archaeology practicum in China
4-10. Dept of Art and Archaeology, SOAS, Univ of London
4-11. ICSK Services for Museums Abroad
4-12. ICSK gift to U.S. Library of Congress
4-13. Kodai, a new journal
4-14. Scientists' Guide
4-15. East Asian Science, Technology and Medicine
4-16. Institute of tropical biology, University of aberdeen
4-17. Thai-Yunnan Project, Australian National University
4-18. Waterproof notebooks for fieldwork
4-19. The Joseph Levenson Book Prize
4-20. Video tapes
4-21. Dongbei scholars look for contacts
4-22. Early Medieval China mailing list on bitnet
4-23. UNESCO Maritime Silk Road Expedition
4-24. archetype of the Paekche Ritual preserved in Japan
4-25. Manchester Ancient Textile Unit
5-1. Museum of Yayoi Culture
5-2. Earliest garden in Japan
5-3. photographic exhibition of Buddhist images
5-4. Asian Rare Books now available
5-5. Prehistoric Mongoloid Dispersals Project
5-6. Silk road art and archaeology
5-7. The Kroger Collection of Oriental Porcelains
5-8. Arts of China
5-9. Site Discovery in the Ogasawara Islands
5-10. Sino-American Field School of Archaeology
5-11. Postscript to the International Silk Road Symposium
5-12. Korean Archaeologists visit Jian Koguryo remains
5-13. Artifacts from Mesolithic age recently discovered
5-14. Repatriation of Choson period garments
5-15. Grants received
5-16. Directory of China scholars
5-17. From Mitteilungsblatt 22
5-18. Inscribed Japanese bronze from 14th-century London
5-19. Ancient Japan exhibition
6-1. From ICSK to the Korea Foundation
6-2. Electronic bulletin board for archaeology
6-3. Query on Chinese prehistoric/bronze-age cultures
6-4. Exhibition of Kaya relics at the National Museum of Korea
6-5. Manchurian Neolithic archaeology bibliography
6-6. Kyongju Excavations
6-7. Grants received
6-8. Ainu artifacts discovered at the Smithsonian
6-9. Obituary for Professor Gwei-Djen Lu-Needham 1904-1991
6-10. Ancient Metallurgy Research Group (AMRG)
6-11. The Newark Museum galleries
6-12. The Metropolitan Museum of Art
6-13. Arthur M. Sackler Gallery
6-14. Computerized bibliographies
6-15. Asian Art Museum of San Francisco
6-16. China Institute in America lectures
6-17. Oriental Ceramic Society lectures
6-18. Korean ceramics from the Ataka Collection
6-19. Archaeology of Inner Asia
6-20. Institute for Asian Studies lectures
6-21. Asian Conservation Studio & Training Program
6-22. The Ashmolean Museum Department of Eastern Art
6-23. The Denver Art Museum
6-24. The Freer Gallery of Art
6-25. The Shaanxi History Museum
6-26. Women's History Network
6-27. National Museum of Korea exhibitions
6-28. The Royal Museum of Scotland
6-29. Koguryo & Bohai archaeology lectures
6-30. The British Library
6-31. Portable art from China's Palaeolithic
6-32. Dr. Han Byong-sam honoured
6-33. Newsletter on IGCP 296 (Quaternary of Asia & Pacific)
6-34. Asahi 'Site of the Year' Award
6-35. Bunkacho-Smithsonian Institution joint research program
8-1. Rock Art Research Association of China
8-2. Asahi Prize
8-3. Metropolitan Museum of Art: Arms and Armor Galleries
8-4. Museum fur Volkerkunde, Vienna
8-5. Korean ceramic techniques course
8-6. The Art Institute of Chicago
8-7. Royal Ontario Museum
8-8. Art Libraries Society of North America
8-9. Denver Art Museum
8-10. Introduction to early woodworking technology
8-11. Faunal and lithic workshops in China
8-12. British Museum Korea Foundation Gallery
8-13. Lithic Casts
8-14. Summer excavation practicum in Xi'an, China
8-15. Smithsonian North Pacific & Arctic project
8-16. Chinese Rock Art specialist seeks scholarly interchange
8-17. Silk Road video series
8-18. Korea Foundation
8-19. Excavation of rare Korean Neolithic human bones
8-20. The First Emperor of China videodisc
8-21. Electronic books: the Kojien
8-22. The Aerial Archaeology Research Group (AARG)
8-23. Society for Archaeological Sciences (SAS)
8-24. First official 'State Prehistoric Artifact'
8-25. Scholarship in Numismatics & coin exhibition
8-26. British Archaeological Bibliography (BAB)
8-27. New series for archaeological publications
8-28. Brooklyn Museum's Ainu Research Project
8-29. Kaya exhibit in Japan
8-30. Institute for Asian Studies Lecture series
8-31. Art Institute of Chicago Gallery opening & lecture series
8-32. Los Angeles County Museum of Art lectures
8-33. Henderson Collection of Korean Ceramics
8-34. Freer Gallery of Art
8-35. Yale University Art Gallery
8-36. Arthur M. Sackler Gallery Japan exhibit
8-37. Toledo Museum of Art
8-38. University of California Art Museum
8-39. Hunan Archaeology Exhibition
8-40. New Orleans Museum of Art
8-41. CSCPRC
8-42. New East Asian Art Newsletter
8-43. Southeast Asian developments
8-44. Foreign Fieldwork in China
8-45. Call for Palace Museum volunteers
8-46. PDF exhibit
8-47. Great Britain-China Centre lectures
9-1. European Association of Archaeologists
9-2. WAC NEWS
9-3. Japan Petrograph Society (JPS)
9-4. Archaeological Studies on War and Violence
9-5. ACRO Update
9-6. Field system excavated at Misari
9-7. Early rice in Korea
9-8. Cammann bibliography and papers available
9-9. Spring Lectures, Institute of Asian Studies, NY
9-10. New National Cultural Properties in Japan
9-11. Cotsen Prize, UCLA Institute of Archaeology
9-12. Huang Hsing Foundation
9-13. NEH Research Program awards
9-14. CCK grant awards
9-15. Brown University Chinese collection
9-16. Japan Foundation Grant awards
9-17. The Blair Society
9-18. Positions: East Asia Cultures Critique
9-19. H.H. Mu Far Eastern Library
9-20. The finest grave ever found in Hong Kong
9-21. Lord Wilson Heritage Trust, Hong Kong
9-22. Annotated Bibliographies for Anthropologists
9-23. Request for info on "gold, grooved disk" in China
9-24. Society for Archaeololgical Sciences Email
9-25. European Archaeological Database EUARCH
9-26. Japanese conservation activities
9-27. Paleoanthropology Society
9-28. Boston Fine Arts Museum Nagoya Branch
9-29. Palaeomonsoonal variation in China last 130,000 years
9-30. Commission on Quaternary Shorelines (INQUA)
9-31. Influence of sea level rise on Yangzi R. since 12,100 BP
9-32. Early Palaeolithic in China
9-33. News from Zhoukoudian
9-34. News from Yuanmou
9-35. Bone modification studies at Shiyu
9-36. Ashmolean Korea exhibition
9-37. Silk Road exhibition in Germany
9-38. Tung-Huang Pao-Ts'ang
9-39. The History and Culture of Korea
9-40. Sino-American Field School of Archaeology
9-41. Southeast Asian Archaeology International Newsletter
9-42. Lithic Technology
9-43. 'Sea of Korea' on old maps
10-1. Bonn archaeological statistics package (BASP)
10-2. Japanese excavations
10-3. Korea Foundation films
10-4. Grants awarded
10-5. ACRO Update
10-6. Publishing opportunities
10-7. Early woodworking technology course
10-8. Lost Cities of the Chinese Silk Route tour
10-9. UK Summer Schools
10-10. Asian Art and Ethnography Collections in North American Museums
10-11. Taiwan Research Institute for Cultural Heritage
10-12. Lithic studies Society
10-13. Cultural relics protection & restoration center, Xi'an
10-14. Cultural Properties preservation in Japan
10-15. Dating hair from archaeological sites
10-16. Top 10 excavations in China for 1992
10-17. Silk Road videos
10-18. World History Association
From EAANnouncements volume 11, notes on museums, exhibitions and lectures have been listed in their own sections and therefore do not appear in NOTEWORTHIES.
11-1. Ancient map on hemp reproduced
11-2. Rice phytoliths in Jomon pottery of 1500 BC
11-3. A 'Siberian Eve' next?
11-4. Request for microorganism information
11-5. Han Dynasty women warriors statues & peanuts
11-6. Paekche Kingdom preservation areas
11-7. Independent Scholars of Asia, Inc.
11-8. Moats galore!
11-9. Yamanashi archaeology, Japan
11-10. 7-branched sword interpretation
11-11. Canadian Foundation for the Preservation of Chinese Cultural & Historical Treasures
11-12. Request for ancient roads information
11-13. Pacific Rim Archaeology
11-14. Landsat data
11-15. Current Research in the Pleistocene
11-16. South East Asia Research
11-17. FMF excavation practicum in Xian, China
11-18. Repatriation of books
11-19. New SPAFA address
11-20. Free radiocarbon dates
11-21. Email directory of Archaeologists
11-22. Excavation of Tangun's tomb
12-1. Jewish settlements in China
12-2. Japanese discoveries
12-3. Chinese maps
12-4. Ghengis Khan explorations
12-5. British Archaeological Bibliography
12-6. Syllabus bank on Korea
12-7. Paekche relics returned to Korea
12-8. Ars Orientalis
12-9. Korean Studies in China
12-10. International Institute for Asian Studies, Leiden
12-11. Sinological bookshops in Tokyo
12-12. Artifact Pens
12-13. Paekche metal workshop
12-14. World-Wide-Web (WWW)
12-15. Shellmound request
12-16. Zooarchaeological Research News
12-17. An archaeological park at Yangshao?
12-18. Heritage Bulletin Board
12-19. Clearing the Kumaso name
12-20. Ancient Siberians
12-21. Annotated Bibliographies for Anthropologists
12-22. Protohistoric Yamato index
13-1. Japan : Kyushu-Dayori
13-2. International Symposium on the Integration of Chinese Archaeology and History
13-3. American archaeologists observe excavation at Bancun
13-4. CSCC grants for Chinese publications
13-5. GEMS Grassland publication
13-6. Another gold seal presented to a local king
13-7. Chinese Environmental History Newsletter & Network
13-8. Internet resources for heritage conservation, historic preservation and archaeology
13-9. Outstanding archaeological discoveries in China, 1993
13-10. Shang oracle bone index
13-11. Zhoukoudian research
13-12. Index to Contents of Chinese Academic Journals
13-13. Booklist on Early China
13-14. Southern Siberian excavations of Xiongnu sites
13-15. Hamada Kosaku in London
13-16. Mongolnews from the AMS
13-17. The Ancient India and Iran Trust
13-18. Electronic HRAF
13-19. Anthropological networking
13-20. Slides of Chinese archaeology
13-21. The "Breaker Junk"
13-22. Travelling exhibition on Ainu culture and history
13-23. Jesup II Research Initiative
13-24. Arctic Studies Center Alaskan office
13-25. Nakayama Otsuka Tomb excavation
Index of authored contributions to EAANnouncements
EAANnouncements 1 (June 90)
Miwa site, Nara Prefecture, pp. 2-3, by Gina Barnes
Yoshinogari site, Saga Prefecture, pp. 3-4, by Mark Hudson & G.L. Barnes
EAANnouncements 2 (Oct 90)
Korean Earthwatch Project, p. 10, by Sarah Nelson
The Use of Animals in Medieval Japan, pp. 11-12, by Akira MATSUI
Archaeological/Historical Study of Chek Lap Kok Island, p. 12-14, by Bill Meacham
EAANnouncements 3 (Feb 91)
Hokkaido archaeology: a review article, pp. 9-10, by Mark Hudson
Early Japanese State Bibliography: a preliminary analysispp. 10-12, by Gina Barnes
EAANnouncements 4 (June 91)
Chek Lap Kok, pp. 11-13, by Robert Esser
Yoshinogari Update, pp. 13-14, by Mark Hudson
A Workshop on the Chinese and their Northern Neighbors, pp. 14, by Katheryn Linduff
Hokkaido Earthwatch Project, pp. 15-16, by Gary Crawford
Notes from the EAAN Roundtable, pp. 16-19, by Francis Allard
EAANnouncements 5 (Oct 91)
The Role of Wetland Sites in Japanese Prehistory, pp. 8-10, by Akira MATSUI
Success and Failure in the Japanese Palaeolithic, pp. 10-13, by Peter Bleed
Miyanomae: an early rice paddy site in Yamanashi, pp. 13-14, by Mark Hudson
The San-no-hara Site in Izu, pp. 14-15, by Mariko YAMAGATA and Mark Hudson
Indonesia and Her Relations with the Mainland, pp. 15-17, by Katheryn M. Linduff
EANNnouncements 6 (Feb 92)
Rock Art in China, pp. 7-10, by P.G. Bahn
The Fudan Archaeology Practicum Experience, pp. 10-11, by Helen Loveday
Hominid Occupation in the Imjin Basin, Korea, pp. 11-13, by Seonbok YI
The Jomon in western Japan: two exhibitions reviewed, pp. 13-14, by Simon Kaner
The Hayato: South Kyushu and Kinai in the Kofun period, pp. 14-15, by Kazuaki YOSHIMURA
Archaeological Prospecting Methods Development, pp. 15-16, by Yasushi NISHIMURA
EAANnouncements 8 (Oct 92)
Student report on excavation work in Japan, pp. 12-14, by Orri Vésteinsson
Excavation participation at Byodobo-Iwamuro, pp. 14-15, by Anthony C. Abry
A Trip to Nihewan, pp. 15-18, by Kidong BAE
Site Survey in Southern China, pp. 18-20, by Francis Allard
A Two-Conference Report from Japan, pp. 20-21, by Gina L. Barnes
EAANnouncements 9 (Feb 93)
The Zhoukoudian International Paleoanthropological Research Center, pp. 6-7,
by John Olsen
Recent archaeological discoveries on Stone Age sites in the Russian Far East,
the Maritime Region, pp. 7-8, by Andrew V. Tabarev
Binford's Japanese start in archaeology, p. 8, submitted by Paul Bahn
The Third International Academic Conference on the Archaeology around the Bohai Sea,
pp. 8-9, by Sarah Nelson
Stench of Corruption, pp. 9-10, by YKH
EAANnouncements 10 (June 1993)
Early ceramics and aquatic subsistence? pp. 11-12, by Kevin C. MacDonald
Archaeobotany in Japan, pp. 12-14, by Aoi HOSOYA
Getting world connected, pp. 4, by Simon Hollege
Tsuboi: Archaeological Studies in Japan, pp. 36, reviewed by Gina Barnes
Ahn, S.M. (Ph.D.): Origin and differentiation of domesticated rice in Asia, p. 15
Kwon, H.S. (Ph.D.): A regional analysis of the Kaya polities in Korea, p. 15
Fawcett, C.P. (Ph.D.): A study of the socio-political context of Japanese archaeology, p.15
Taylor, S.J. (Ph.D.): Ploughshares into swords: the iron industry and social development in protohistoric Korea and Japan, p. 16
Underhill, A.P. (Ph.D. abstract): Changing patterns of pottery production during the Longshan period of northern China, ca. 2500-2000 BC, p. 16
Cook, C.A. (Ph.D.): Auspicious metals and southern spirits: analysis of the Chu bronze inscriptions, p. 17
Kompier, T.M.F. (M.A.) The Japanese state formation process: a case of peer polity interactions?, p. 17-18
EAANnouncements 11 (November 1993)
Work-study in Japan in conservation archaeology, p. 11, by Gaidagh E. Chapman
Ceramic ethnoarchaeology in Guizhou province, p. 12. by Anne P. Underhill
Fieldwork in northern Guangdong province, pp. 12-13, by Francis Allard
Late Neolithic in the Beifang, pp. 13-14, by Katheryn M. Linduff
Wang, T. (Ph.D.): Colour symbolism in Late Shang China, p. 14
Nelson: The archaeology of Korea, pp. 29-30, rev. by G.L. Barnes
Sasaki: The birth of Japanese history (in Japanese), pp. 30-31,rev. by Mark Hudson
Tsude: The formation of Japanese agrarian society (in Japanese), pp. 31-33, rev. by Wayne Farris
Whitfield: The problem of meaning in early Chinese ritual bronzes, pp. 33-4, rev. by G.L. Barnes
EAANouncments 12 (February 1994)
IIAS Workshop on HSS origins from DNA, pp. 9-10, by Colin Renfrew
Comment on the ESR dating of Tangun's bones, pp. 10-11, by ZHOU Li Ping
The World Heritage Convention in the Far East, pp. 11-12, by Henry Cleere
Troubles in Shenzhen Economic Zone archaeology, p. 12, by Peter Thompson
A year with the Japanese Palaeolithic, pp. 12-13, by Anthony Sinclair
The Jindo logboat, p. 14, MCI
Ceramic ethnoarchaeology in Yunnan Province, p. 15, by William Longacre
Seyock, B. (M.A.): Die Residenz der Königin Himiko: Historische Nachrichten und archäologische Befunde-Ein Vergleich, p. 16
D'Andrea, A.C. (Ph.D.): Palaeoethnobotany of later Jomon and Yayoi cultures of northeastern Japan: northeastern Aomori and southwestern Hokkaido, p. 16
Lee, Y.K. (1993): Tribal wsegmentation and spatial variability: the social organization of a prehistoric Yangshao village settlement, p. 17
Zorn, B. (1992): On the social complexity of the Erlitou culture, p. 17
Review of the following by Charles Aylmer, pp. 34-35:
Li, Qi & Allan: Oracle bone collections in Great Britain
Hu: Oracle bones seen in the USSR, Germany, USA and Japan
Lefeuvre: Collections d'inscriptions oraculaires en France
Barnes: China, Korea & Japan: the rise of civilization in East Asia, pp. 35-6, rev. by Tom Kompier
Farris: Heavenly warriors: the evolution of Japan's military from 500 to 1300, pp. 36-7, rev. by G.L. Barnes
EAANnouncements 13 (June 1994)
Japanese wetland archaeology, March 1994, pp. 11-12, by John Coles
Excavation at Bancun in Henan Province, pp. 12-13, by Simon Holledge
Visit to the site of Zaojiaoshu in Henan Province, p. 13, by Simon Holledge
Report on research in the Nihewan Basin, pp. 13-14, by Kathy Schick
15th Congress of the IPPA in Chiang Mai, pp. 36-7, by Magnus Fiskesjö
He: Zhongguo wenwu kaogu cidian , p. 38, rev. by Charles Aylmer
Wagner: Iron and steel in ancient China , p. 38-9, rev. by G.L. Barnes
EAANmembers Western-Language Bibliography
on East Asian Archaeology, No. 2 compiled and edited by GL Barnes
DISSERTATIONS in East Asian Archaeology
EAANmembers Directory
November 1994
This directory consists of an alpha-order listing of EAANmembers, their addresses and contact numbers, current as of 30 November 1994. In addition, several other categories of information are listed according to the abbreviations below.
Following is a breakdown of members by country where they currently reside:
| AUSTRALIA Ball, David Bellwood, Dr. Peter Hudson, Mr. Mark Low, Dr. Morris F. CANADA Allard, Francis Chen, Chun Chisholm, Brian Crawford, Prof. Gary D'Andrea, Ms. Cathy Dohrenwend, Dorie Fawcett, Clare Goode, David Habu, Junko Howard, Mr. Jack Ikawa-Smith, Prof. Fumiko Jay, Jennifer W. Pearson, Richard Shutler, Dr. Richard Jr. Underhill, Dr. Anne P. CHINA Li, Prof. Xueqin Liu, Ms. Jenny Taylor, Dr. Sarah J. Thompson, Mr. Peter Wu, Mr. Jiaan CZECHOSLOVAKIA Kesner, Dr. Ladislav DENMARK Juhl, Ms. Susanne Meldgaard, Thomas FINLAND Janhunen, Dr. Juha FRANCE Debaine-Francfort, Dr. Corinne Denes, Laurence Rousset, Dr. Huguette Souhaité, Ms. Stéphanie Vandermeersch, Leon GERMANY Adami, Dr. Norbert R. Dewall, Magdalene von Giele, Enno Girmond, Ms. Sybille Kastrop, Gabriele Kuhn, Prof. Dr. Dieter Newland, Amy Prüch, Margarete Sasse, Prof. Werner Seyock, Barbara Warlies-Shinoto, Maria Werner, Sabina Zorn, Ms. Bettina HONG KONG Yip, Alex Cho-Hong ITALY Caterina, Prof. Lucia Ciarla, Dr. Roberto Orioli, Dr. Marcello Riotto, Maurizio Salviati, Mr. Filippo JAPAN Abry, Anthony C. Adami, Dr. Norbert R. Akazawa, Prof. Takeru Batten, Dr. Bruce L. Edwards, Walter Fuqua, Douglas S. Goodwin, Dr. Janet R. Hodgkinson, Lise Holledge, Mr. Simon Imamura, Prof. Keiji Keally, Charles Kobayashi, Prof. Tatsuo Kojo, Dr. Yasushi Kompier, Tom Kondo, Prof. Hideo Koyanagi, Yoshiki Kreiner, Prof. Dr. Josef Maekawa, Mr. Kaname Matsui, Mr. Akira Mizoguchi, Koji Nishiaki, Dr. Yoshihiro Nishimura, Mr. Yasushi Oblas, Dr. Peter B. Okamura, Mr. Katsuyuki Okita, Prof. Masaaki Steinhaus, Werner Tanihata, Ms Miho Tsude, Prof. Hiroshi Watabe, Takeshi Yamagata, Ms. Mariko Yamamoto, Kaoru Yamamoto, Tadanao Yamamoto, Kaoru Yoshikai, Masato Yoshimura, Kazuaki KOREA Ahn, Dr. Seung-mo An, Dr. Deogim Bae, Dr. Ki-dong Choi, Seung-yup Choo, Mr. Youn-Sik Kim, Mr. Gwon-gu Lee, Dong-Hee Lee, Hyeong Woo Lee, Dr. In-Sook Park, Hi-hyun Shin, Prof. Kyung Cheol THE NETHERLANDS Bausch, Ilona NEW ZEALAND Sutton, Dr. Douglas G. PORTUGAL Da Cunha Lopes, Teresa SINGAPORE Kwok, Mr. Kian Chow |
SWITZERLAND Dallais, Mr. Philippe Loveday, Dr. Helen TAIWAN Chen, Wei-Chun Chu, Chen-Gi Huang, Prof. Shih-chang Li, Te-Jen Liu, Yih-Chang Tsang, Cheng-Hwa Chen, Chung-yu Chen, Dr. Yu-mei Li, Kuang-Ti Hsu, Prof. Min-fu UNITED KINGDOM Allan, Dr. Sarah Aylmer, Mr Charles Barnes, Dr. Gina L. Birrell, Anne Chapman, Ms. Gaidagh E. Deuchler, Prof. Martina Faulkner, Dr. Rupert F.J. Fukasawa, Yuriko Gamble, Dr. Clive Grayson, Dr. James H. Hosoya, Aoi Kaner, Simon Keates, Susan G. Kerr, Ms. Rose Morris, Martin Rawson, Dr. Jessica Reynolds, Dr. Timothy E.G. Rivkin, Ms. Laura Rodwell, Ms. Sally Rowley-Conwy, Dr. Peter Saville, Mr. Alan Sinclair, Dr. Anthony Thompson, Dr. Jill Wagner, Dr. Donald B. Wang, Helen Wild, Priscilla Wright, Joshua Zhou, Li Ping UNITED STATES Aigner, Dr. Jean Aikens, Prof. C. Melvin Allen, Dr. J. Michael Banks, Dr. Barbara C. Best, Prof. Jonathan W. Blakeley, Barry Bleed, Prof. Peter Borgen, Prof. Robert Borstel, Mr. Chris Brace, Prof. C. Loring Bunker, Ms. Emma C. Bush, Susan Cao, Yin Chang, Prof. Kwang-chih Chen, Kwang-tzuu Childs-Johnson, Elizabeth Cohen, David J. Cort, Louise Alison DeWoskin, Prof. Kenneth J. Dien, Albert E. Evasdottir, Ms. Erika Falkenhausen, Dr. Lothar von Farris, Prof. W. Wayne Fiskesjö, Mr. Magnus Fitzhugh, William W. Fontein, Dr. Jan Graybill, Prof. Maribeth Handler, Ms. Sarah Harper, Donald J. Ho, Chuimei Hutterer, Prof. Karl L. Hwang, Ming-Chorng James, Dr. Jean N. Kang, Bong-won Kaufman, Prof. Laura S. Keightley, Prof. David Kuo, Jason C. Lee, Mr. Yun-kuen Lengyel, Prof. Alfonz Li, Yungti Linduff, Dr. Katheryn M. Liu, Li Mackenzie, Dr. Colin Marubbio, M. Lavonne Mitchell, Dr. Richard H. Murowchick, Dr. Robert E. Nelson, Prof. Sarah M. Olsen, Prof. John W. Pai, Dr. Hyung Il Pak, Yangjin Pearce, Dr. Scott Peters, Dr. Heather A. Piggott, Prof. Joan Pitts, Prof. Forrest R. Pope, Prof. Geoffrey G. Price, Nancy Thompson Puett, Michael Rhee, Prof. Song Nai Robinson, Mr. Kenneth R. Sasaki, Ken-ichi Schick, Dr. Kathy Schoenfelder, John W. Shaughnessy, Edward L. Shelach, Gideon Shim, Mr. Jae-hoon Shultz, Prof. Edward J. Smith, Mr. Bruce W. Smith, Dr. Kidder Solheim, Prof. Wilhelm G. II Spiro, Audrey Stamps, Richard Steinhardt, Nancy Shatzman Takamiya, Hiroto Tong, Prof. Enzheng Thorp, Robert L. Trieu, D. Ann Underhill, Dr. Anne P. Unger, Dr. J. Marshall Wang, Wenjian Winthrop, Ms. Kathryn R. Yamada, Shoh Ye, Wa Yonemura, Ms. Ann Yuan, Prof. Tsing Zhao, Zhijun |
MEMBERS DIRECTORY:
[The EAANmembers Directory is not submitted in this website]
amEAAN
• The annual amEAAN meeting will take place on Friday, April 7, 1995, 6.30-8.30 pm in the Hemisphere Room at the Washington Hilton & Towers Hotel, 1919 Connecticut Ave. N.W., Washington, DC. It will be chaired by Prof. Katheryn M. Linduff, Dept of Fine Arts, Univ Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA 15260 USA 412-648-2409, FAX 412-648-2792 ([...])
Contact her if you wish to participate in any way; all EAAN members are welcome to attend the
meeting whether or not they are registered for the AAS conference.