Jump to content

Archaeological Society of Victoria

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Archaeological Society of Victoria was formed in 1964 from the efforts of University of Melbourne academic William (Bill) Culican in response to the enthusiastic response to his archaeology lectures run through the CAE.[1][2] In 1976 it combined with the Anthropological Society of Victoria to create the Archaeological and Anthropological Society of Victoria or AASV.[3] Among its contribution to the archaeology discipline in Victoria, it undertook excavations at Dry Creek, Keilor in the early 1970s, to uncover evidence of Pleistocene Aboriginal occupation.[4]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Presland, Gary (1998) ‘A.S. Gallus and the Archaeological Society of Victoria.’ The Artefact 21:9-13
  2. ^ Margaret Bullen, Australian Anthropological Society, Annual Conference 2007 - Transforming Economies, Changing States, [1]
  3. ^ "History of the AASV". Archived from the original on 12 December 2010. Retrieved 3 December 2010.
  4. ^ Activities of the Archaeological Society of Victoria Concerning the Confluence Site of the Dry Creek and the Maribyrnong River in 1974/75., http://dspace.flinders.edu.au/dspace/handle/2328/274