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Press Releases
1-02-2005 - "Archaeology
Family Fair"
The Archaeological Institute of America (AIA) is proud
to present the fifth annual Digging into Archaeology: A Hands-on
Family Fair. This event, initiated in San Diego in 2001,
will be presented in Boston on Sunday, January 9, 2005 from
11:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m. in the Republic Ballroom of the Sheraton
Hotel.
The AIA Archaeology Fair is the perfect place for
children (and adults) to learn about the past by participating
in over two dozen, hands-on exhibits, meeting real field
archaeologists, and asking questions of experts about ancient
civilizations. Archaeologists and field experts from around
the country, as well as local Boston archaeologists and museum
educators, will be hosting various educational, hands-on
activities for visitors to enjoy. There will be ceramic pots
to reconstruct, ancient board games to play, mini-digs, contests,
prizes and much more Archaeology from around the world and
from various cultures and centuries will be represented.
“You can't start too young,” says Professor Jane C. Waldbaum, President of the
AIA. “Archaeology is an exciting field with new discoveries being made
all the time. It appeals to children's imaginations. Our children's archaeology
fair is part of the AIA's educational outreach effort to bring the thrill of
scientific archaeological discovery, interpretation, and decipherment to the
younger generation.” Waldbaum
also said that the Fair is an important aspect of the Institute's outreach
mission to bring the latest information about archaeology to the interested
general public.
Archaeologists and field experts from around the country,
as well as local New England archaeologists and museum educators,
will be hosting various educational, hands-on activities
for the children to enjoy. Parents just might be surprised
at what they could learn, too! Excavate the Red Sox Nation
with the Institute of History, Archaeology, and Education,
visit a shipwreck from 300 BC, reconstruct ancient pottery,
erect an obelisk, learn to make ancient tools, and much more…games,
contests and prizes included! Archaeology from around the world and from
various cultures and centuries will be represented.
Visitors can even build their own ancient vessels with
the Captain of the Kyrenia Liberty ship from Cyprus.
For the first time, this year's Fair will also feature
the Plimoth Plantation, home to the experts on 17th century
living in New England. Karin Goldstein, Curator of Original
Collections at the Plantation, said “Archaeology
is one of the many sources, as well as recreated technologies,
that we use all the time in recreating daily life in the
17th century. Kids can study the broken reproduction pot
shards to learn about the many kinds of cooking and eating
pots that the Pilgrims and Wampanoag used almost 400 years
ago."
SUNY Buffalo students will bring the ancient world of Assyrians
to life: fair visitors will be able to explore the palace
of the king through a virtual computer reconstruction. Other
local museums and institutions slated to participate include
Old Sturbridge Village, the Museums of Harvard, the Golden
Ball Tavern Keepers of Weston, the Flintknappers Club of
Boston University, the Strawbery Banke Museum of New Hampshire
and many more!
On-site entrance fees are $4 per child, $6 per adult or
$12 per family of three, which must include at least one
child. Children 3 and under are admitted free.
Children under 12 must be accompanied by an adult.
The AIA Annual Meeting is a four-day conference at which
scholarly papers are presented to the academic members of
the Institute. Several outreach programs, of which the Archaeology
Fair is one, are designed to appeal to a broader audience
and are open to the public. This year marks the 106th meeting
and showcases over 200 presentations during almost 50 paper
sessions.
The AIA, the oldest nonprofit archaeological organization
in the United States, was founded in 1879 in Boston and was
incorporated by an act of Congress in 1906. With over 8,000
professional and nonprofessional members, it has over 100
local societies in the United States, Canada, and Europe. The
primary mission of the Institute is to educate the public
about archaeology through information derived from the sound
professional practice of archaeology.
As part of this mission, the AIA sponsors a wide range of educational
programs including publications, lectures, and educational
travel.
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