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Restitution of Cultural Property Elements for the Dossier

Dilettantism and plunder — illicit traffic in ancient Malian art

 

1. Born in 1951. Graduate of Yale University, Ph.D., Cambridge University. 1970, Has excavated in Ghana (Begho) and Mali (Jenne‐jeno, survey at Timbuktu). At present Associate Professor of Anthropology at Rice University in Houston, Texas. Principal research interests include geomorphology and palaeoclimatology, urbanism, metallurgy, and the communicative function of prehistoric art. Has published on the ethnoarchaeology of traditional architecture, urban origins, subsistence practices, the archaeology of prehistoric African art, and the geomorphological evolution of the Inland Niger Delta, in addition to more conventional archaeological reports

2. Born in 1951. Graduate of the University of Pennsylvania and Cambridge University, Ph.D., University of California at Santa Barbara, 1979. At present Associate Professor of Anthropology at Rice University. Teaching and research interests include human origins, domestication, human osteology, and the emergence of complex societies. She has co‐directed archaeological research at Jenne‐Jeno (Malirin) in 1977 and 1981 and at LTumbuktu in 1984. With her husband she has written several publications on these excavations and syntheses of West African prehistory (in American Scientist 69 (1981): 602–613; Annual Review of Anthropology 12 (1983); 215–258: and African Archaeological Review 2 (1984): 73–98. She is also the associate editor for prehistory of Current Anthropology.

Notes

1. Born in 1951. Graduate of Yale University, Ph.D., Cambridge University. 1970, Has excavated in Ghana (Begho) and Mali (Jenne‐jeno, survey at Timbuktu). At present Associate Professor of Anthropology at Rice University in Houston, Texas. Principal research interests include geomorphology and palaeoclimatology, urbanism, metallurgy, and the communicative function of prehistoric art. Has published on the ethnoarchaeology of traditional architecture, urban origins, subsistence practices, the archaeology of prehistoric African art, and the geomorphological evolution of the Inland Niger Delta, in addition to more conventional archaeological reports

2. Born in 1951. Graduate of the University of Pennsylvania and Cambridge University, Ph.D., University of California at Santa Barbara, 1979. At present Associate Professor of Anthropology at Rice University. Teaching and research interests include human origins, domestication, human osteology, and the emergence of complex societies. She has co‐directed archaeological research at Jenne‐Jeno (Malirin) in 1977 and 1981 and at LTumbuktu in 1984. With her husband she has written several publications on these excavations and syntheses of West African prehistory (in American Scientist 69 (1981): 602–613; Annual Review of Anthropology 12 (1983); 215–258: and African Archaeological Review 2 (1984): 73–98. She is also the associate editor for prehistory of Current Anthropology.

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