Prices in AUD. Shipping worldwide. Flat rate $8 postage per order within Australia. International by weight calculated at checkout. Read full terms.
-
An Archaeological Life: Papers in Honour of Jay Hall
Sean Ulm; Ian Lilley
Brisbane: University of Queensland Press, 2006. -
The Great Kartan Mystery
Ronald Lampert
Canberra: Department of Prehistory, Research School of Pacific Studies, The Australian National University, 1981.This copy with Records of the Australian Museum Volume 37 No. 1 signed by Lampert, with a paper by Nicholas Peterson and Ronald Lampert ‘A Central Australian Ochre Mine’ laid in.
-
The Alligator Rivers: Prehistory and Ecology in Western Arnhem Land
Carmel Schrire
Canberra: Department of Prehistory, Research School of Pacific Studies, The Australian National University, 1982. -
Sinan: Architect of Suleyman the Magnificent and the Ottoman Golden Age
John Freely; Augusto Romano Burelli; Ara Guler
London: Thames & Hudson, 1992. -
Antiquities of Roman London
Edward Foord
London: Proprietor of the Roman Bath, No date. -
Antiquities of Roman Britain: Guide to the Principal Roman Sites in England Outside London
Edward Foord
London: Proprietor of the Roman Bath, No date. -
Die Graeber- und Textilfunde von Achmim-Panopolis
R. Forrer
Strassburg: Emil Birkhauser, Basel, 1891.The burial and textile finds from Akhmim-Panopolis. With 16 plates and 250 illustrations.
-
Thorsbjerg Mosefund. Beskrivelse af de Oldsager, som i aarene 1858-61 ere udgravede af Thorsbjerg Mose ved Sonder-Brarup i Angel; et Samlet Fund,
Conr. Engelhardt [Helvin Conrad Engelhardt]
Kjobenhavn: I Commission Hos G. E. C. GAD, 1863...henhorende til den aeldre jernalder og bevaret i den kongelige samling Af Nordiske Oldsager I Flendsborg. A description of the antiquities, which in the years 1858-61 were excavated by Helvig Conrad Engelhardt at Thorsberg moor
in Anglia, a peat bog in which the Angles made votive offerings between 100 B.C. to A.D. 500, approximately. The finds are now on display in the State Archaeological Museum at Gottorf Castle. A scarce and important work of Iron Age archaeology with 18 copperplate engravings by J. Magn. Petersen.