Links
Related Sites and Resources on the World Wide Web
Archaeometry and Research Laboratories
- Archaeometry Lab at CSU–Long Beach (operated by Hector Neff)
- Berkeley Archaeological XRF Laboratory at UC–Berkeley (operated by M. Steven Shackley)
- Northwest Research Obsidian Studies Laboratory (operated by Craig E. Skinner)
- Archaeometry Laboratory, SUNY Albany (operated by William Lanford)
- Centre for Applied Archaeological Analyses, University of Southampton (operated by Elaine Morris)
- Laboratory of Archaeometry at the National Center for Scientific Research, Demokritos, Greece
- Munich Archaeometry Group, Technical University of Munich
- Research Laboratory for Archaeology & The History of Art, University of Oxford
- Smithsonian Museum Conservation Institute
- The University of Tennessee Center for Archaeometry and Geochronology
- Archaeometry Group at the HISKP, Universität Bonn (operated by Hans Mommsen)
- Program on Ancient Technologies and Archaeological Materials (ATAM), University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
- Laboratory for Archaeometry and Non-destructive Analyses, University of Rome
- Laboratory for Archaeological Chemistry, University of Wisconsin–Madison
General Archaeological and Archaeometrical Information
Mapping
- TopoZone (Allows you to easily obtain geographic coordinates and topographic maps of the U.S.)
- TerraServer (Topographic maps for all of the U.S., and aerial photography for portions of the U.S.)
- Google Earth (Useful tool for obtaining imagery of the world)
Recent research reported by the Archaeometry Lab at MURR after June 2009 is based on support by the National Science Foundation under our current grant number 0802757. Earlier research was supported by several NSF grants, including the following numbers: 8801707, 9102016, 9503035, 9802366, 9977237, 0102325, 0405042, 0504015, and 0802757. Any opinions, findings and conclusions or recommendations expressed in this material are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Science Foundation.
Last Updated November 20, 2009
© 1996–2009
University of Missouri–Columbia