book menu Penn Press home page New Books Search Options Journals About Penn Press For Authors Exam & Review Copies Rights & Permissions Ordering Contact Us Join Our Mailing List Related Web Sites Your Shopping Cart
Fall 2009 catalog cover

In addition to the featured hardcover releases, the Penn Press fall 2009 catalog announces many new paperbacks, among them: From Civil Rights to Human Rights; W.E.B. Du Bois, American Prophet; Visions of Progress; Mapping Decline; The Dynamics of Violence in Central Africa; Faculty Towers; Hitler's Face; Monsters; Used Books; Marriage and Violence; and The Crusades and the Christian World of the East.
Search the full text of this book:

Powered by Google

The Late Bronze Age and Early Iron Ages of Central Transjordan
The Baq'ah Valley Project, 1977-1981

Patrick E. McGovern

398 pages | 8 1/2 x 11 | 192 illus.
Cloth 1987 | ISBN 978-0-934718-75-2 | $100.00s | £65.00 | Add to shopping cart
A volume in the University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology series

"McGovern turns the results of a relatively modest excavation into a monumental research report, which can in many ways serve as a model for archaeological reporting . . . deserves to be in every archaeological and anthropological library."—Journal of the American Oriental Society

"McGovern is to be commended for the writing and editing of a near-perfect archaeological report of a group of burial caves in the Baq'ah Valley near Amman. It is comprehensive and far-ranging, thoroughly research and up-to-date, well designed and coherently written. . . . A monumental research report, which can in many ways serve as an model for archaeological reporting . . . deserves to be in every archaeological and anthropological library."—Journal of the American Oriental Society

A critical transition period in the archaeology and history of Palestine—the Late Bronze Age and Early Iron Age—is described in detail from the perspective of a group of sites in the Baq'ah Valley. A major emphasis is on how scientific techniques, including magnetic location of undisturbed burial deposits and analytical reconstruction of very early industries, can be effectively integrated into an archaeological project. Contrary to traditional views, the evidence supports a relatively peaceful development within a single cultural tradition rather than the intrusion of a new people or segment of the existing population, by invasion, migration, or revolt.

| View your shopping cart | Browse Penn Press titles in Archaeology




Penn Press | Site Use and Privacy Policy | University of Pennsylvania
Copyright © 2009 University of Pennsylvania Press. All rights reserved.