Το άρθρο αναφέρεται στο έργο της Ιταλικής Αρχαιολογικής Σχολής Αθηνών στην Κρήτη κατά τα εκατό έτη λειτουργίας της (από το 1908 έως το 2008), έτσι όπως το παρακολούθησε ο Στυλιανός Αλεξίου.
Recent excavations in Kontopigado, Alimos, 5 km south of the Acropolis of Athens have brought to light remains of an extensive Mycenaean installation of still unknown use.
Shannon LaFayette HogueAmerican Journal of Archaeology 120.1 (January 2016): 151-157
In the past three decades, an Iron Age date for reoccupation of areas surrounding the Palace of Nestor on the Epano Englianos Ridge has become well attested, but the extent and nature of this reoccupation has remained unclear.
Carole McCartney & W. Sturt Manning & T. Sarah StewartΕπιστημονική Επετηρίς του τμήματος Αρχαιοτήτων Κύπρου (Report of the Department of Antiquities, Cyprus) 2010 [2012]: 77-94
Nikos Efstratiou, Carole McCartney, Panagiotis Karkanas & Dimitris KyriakouΕπιστημονική Επετηρίς του τμήματος Αρχαιοτήτων Κύπρου (Report of the Department of Antiquities, Cyprus) 2010 [2012]: 1-27.
This article offers an iconographic and stylistic analysis of the published painted larnakes (clay sarcophagi) with funerary scenes from Late Bronze Age Tanagra in central Greece.
Catherine E. PrattAmerican Journal of Archaeology 120.1 (January 2016): 27-66
It is generally accepted that Cretan transport stirrup jars were the preferred bulk liquid transport container of the Late Bronze Age Aegean, but the reasons behind their invention, relatively rapid dissemination and widespread use, and sudden disappearance are not well understood.
Olympia PeperakiAmerican Journal of Archaeology 120.1 (January 2016): 3-25
Although the importance of seal use on the Greek mainland during the Early Bronze Age has long been recognized, its significance still remains difficult to grasp.
Michael FotiadisHesperia 85.1 (January-March 2016): 91-119
When Heinrich Schliemann appeared in the Aegean in the 1870s, prehistoric archaeology in Greece was headed for a future very different from the one that subsequently materialized.
Antonis KotsonasAmerican Journal of Archaeology 120.2 (April 2016): 239-270
Periodization is a fundamental exercise for archaeology and for historical studies in general, aimed primarily at clarity in communication. However, this exercise imposes particular modes of conceptualizing specific periods.