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document.write('  <tr><td><div style="float: right;"><img src="http://heuristscholar.org/heurist/php/resize_image.php?file_id=ac3732e3d8578589c0f248dbcc01d57f4b8003af"/></div><a href="http://sylvester.acl.arts.usyd.edu.au/cocoon/heurist/73/reftype_renderer/87025" target="_new" onclick="window.open(href,\'\',\'scrollbars=1,resizable=yes, width=600,height=500\'); return false;">Dr Craig Barker</a><br/>Research associate/adjunct<br/><b>Teaching and research interests: </b>Craig Barker graduated with a PhD in Classical Archaeology from the University of Sydney in 2005, researching transport amphorae from the ‘Tombs of the Kings’ at Paphos in Cyprus. He has worked as a tutor and a lecturer for the Department, and is currently Manager of Education and Public Programs for Sydney University Museums, which includes the collections of the Nicholson and Macleay Museums. This work has seen him take a keen interest in public archaeology and the promotion of archaeological work to the wider community. He has worked extensively on fieldwork in Australia, Greece, Turkey and Cyprus, and is co-director of the University of Sydney’s excavations of the site of the Hellenistic-Roman theatre of Paphos along with Richard Green and Smadar Gabrieli. His interests include the eastern Mediterranean wine trade, theatre architecture, Hellenistic funerary practices, archaeological education and the portrayal of archaeology in popular culture.<br/><br/></td></tr>'); ++rows;
document.write('  <tr><td><a href="http://sylvester.acl.arts.usyd.edu.au/cocoon/heurist/73/reftype_renderer/54088" target="_new" onclick="window.open(href,\'\',\'scrollbars=1,resizable=yes, width=600,height=500\'); return false;">A/Prof. Judy Birmingham</a><br/>Research associate/adjunct<br/><br/></td></tr>'); ++rows;
document.write('  <tr><td><div style="float: right;"><img src="http://heuristscholar.org/heurist/php/resize_image.php?file_id=6d7eb9be408ad1062a04bb1e546ceaf129256b2f"/></div><a href="http://sylvester.acl.arts.usyd.edu.au/cocoon/heurist/73/reftype_renderer/68162" target="_new" onclick="window.open(href,\'\',\'scrollbars=1,resizable=yes, width=600,height=500\'); return false;">Dr Stephen Bourke</a><br/>Research associate/adjunct<br/><b>Teaching and research interests: </b>Stephen is a Near Eastern archaeologist and has worked on numerous international archaeological projects since 1980. He currently directs Sydney University excavations at Pella in Jordan, and has done so since 1992. The most recent field season occurred in early 2007, with another season planned for early 2009. Previously he led four seasons of renewed excavations at Chalcolithic Teleilat Ghassul, Jordan, between 1994-99. His interests centre on the Neolithic beginnings of urban life through to the end of the pre-Classical Iron Age in the Levant (ca. 6500-300 BC). He has written or contributed to over 50 publications. Current research projects include work arising out of ongoing excavations at Pella, mainly centring on the massive Fortress temple complex, under excavation since 1994. He is completing a monograph on Sydney University work at Chalcolithic Teleilat Ghassul and working on another based on his Doctoral work on British excavations at Tell Nebi Mend, ancient Qadesh on the Orontes. Connected with this earlier work, he is now researching the Second Millennium BC settlement history of the Homs region for the University of Durham\'s central Syrian Homs regional Survey. Stephen is NEAF\'s Treasurer.<br/><br/></td></tr>'); ++rows;
document.write('  <tr><td><div style="float: right;"><img src="http://heuristscholar.org/heurist/php/resize_image.php?file_id=c64361b17ff2eeb3d392227fcb57048f7051fdd5"/></div><a href="http://sylvester.acl.arts.usyd.edu.au/cocoon/heurist/73/reftype_renderer/87021" target="_new" onclick="window.open(href,\'\',\'scrollbars=1,resizable=yes, width=600,height=500\'); return false;">Dr Smadar Gabrieli</a><br/>Research associate/adjunct<br/><b>Teaching and research interests: </b>Smadar Gabrieli graduated from the University of Sydney with a PhD in 2006, looking at domestic ceramics from the 13th-19th centuries as representations of local economy and social organisation in Cyprus. She has extensive fieldwork and conservation experience in Mediterranean archaeology. Along with Richard Green and Craig Barker she is co-director of the University of Sydney’s excavations of the Hellenistic-Roman theatre at Nea Paphos.<br/><br/></td></tr>'); ++rows;
document.write('  <tr><td><div style="float: right;"><img src="http://heuristscholar.org/heurist/php/resize_image.php?file_id=67fe9b519a3807ad8ab89972622de113f48fada5"/></div><a href="http://sylvester.acl.arts.usyd.edu.au/cocoon/heurist/73/reftype_renderer/87024" target="_new" onclick="window.open(href,\'\',\'scrollbars=1,resizable=yes, width=600,height=500\'); return false;">Prof. Richard Green</a><br/>Emeritus Professor/Adjunct,  Research associate/adjunct<br/><b>Teaching and research interests: </b>Greek pottery, material evidence for the style of ancient theatre performance, excavations at the site of the ancient theatre of Paphos in Cyprus.<br/><br/></td></tr>'); ++rows;
document.write('  <tr><td><div style="float: right;"><img src="http://heuristscholar.org/heurist/php/resize_image.php?file_id=aad0954c5b51fe2cef6654264c0c14cc5d4a95f0"/></div><a href="http://sylvester.acl.arts.usyd.edu.au/cocoon/heurist/73/reftype_renderer/64735" target="_new" onclick="window.open(href,\'\',\'scrollbars=1,resizable=yes, width=600,height=500\'); return false;">Dr Mitch Hendrickson</a><br/>Postdoctoral Fellow,  Research staff,  Research associate/adjunct<br/><b>Teaching and research interests: </b>Mitch received his BA Hons and Master of Arts degrees in Archaeology (University of Calgary) before coming to the University of Sydney to complete his PhD. He has worked in a variety of different locales including Chihuahua, Mexico, the Canadian Plains and High Arctic. Over the past five years he has been a member of the Greater Angkor Project studying the Angkorian period (9th to 15th centuries CE) road system in Cambodia, Thailand and Laos. Primary interests include the operational examination of past transportation systems and interrelationships between different spatial and temporal scales of archaeological data sets. In 2009, Mitch will direct a 3-year Australian Research Council Discovery Project at the site of Preah Khan of Kompong Svay (Prasat Bakan) to evaluate the material production of temples, iron and ceramics and document the industrial history of the so-called ‘City of Iron’. The Industries of Angkor Project is an international collaboration that incorporates a wide range of archaeological approaches including GIS, remote sensing, palaeobotany, geophysics, ethnography, survey and excavation.<br/><br/></td></tr>'); ++rows;
document.write('  <tr><td><div style="float: right;"><img src="http://heuristscholar.org/heurist/php/resize_image.php?file_id=b01c97724567ded25f38fa708b79dfe78b2d2272"/></div><a href="http://sylvester.acl.arts.usyd.edu.au/cocoon/heurist/73/reftype_renderer/57267" target="_new" onclick="window.open(href,\'\',\'scrollbars=1,resizable=yes, width=600,height=500\'); return false;">Dr Bob Hudson</a><br/>Research associate/adjunct<br/><b>Teaching and research interests: </b>Bob Hudson (PhD Sydney) is an Honorary Associate with the department, and a visiting professor at the Myanmar University of Culture Field School of Archaeology at Pyay, in Myanmar, the site of the ancient city of Sriksetra. He specialises broadly in the archaeology of Myanmar (Burma) and its neighbouring region, with research covering periods from protohistorical to modern, including Neolithic, Iron Age, Early Urban Period, and the 11th-14th century Bagan period. Other interests include relationships between lowland states and peripheral cultures, Buddhist Art History, and Conservation. Technical specialties related to Southeast Asian archaeology include field survey and excavation, Geographic Information Systems (MapInfo), Remote Sensing, Aerial Photography analysis, Radiocarbon and Thermoluminescence Dating. Bob is also involved in an ongoing international project to genetically track archaeological populations using DNA extracted from modern hair follicle samples. Department, University of Sydney, and a Visiting Professor at the Myanmar Field School of Archaeology at Pyay, Myanmar.<br/><br/></td></tr>'); ++rows;
document.write('  <tr><td><div style="float: right;"><img src="http://heuristscholar.org/heurist/php/resize_image.php?file_id=24d46660b7efbd53de16ed71ad81383082ac76f7"/></div><a href="http://sylvester.acl.arts.usyd.edu.au/cocoon/heurist/73/reftype_renderer/128852" target="_new" onclick="window.open(href,\'\',\'scrollbars=1,resizable=yes, width=600,height=500\'); return false;">Dr Monica M. Jackson</a><br/>Research associate/adjunct<br/><b>Teaching and research interests: </b>Monica M. Jackson is a classical archaeologist, author and lecturer on ancient jewellery and the luxury arts. She specialises in ancient jewellery from both the Mediterranean and Black Sea areas. Her particular area of interest is the study of Hellenistic gold jewellery as chronological evidence.<br/><br/></td></tr>'); ++rows;
document.write('  <tr><td><div style="float: right;"><img src="http://heuristscholar.org/heurist/php/resize_image.php?file_id=de867b740f2c24db23e5c2f558a41a05ae6ed550"/></div><a href="http://sylvester.acl.arts.usyd.edu.au/cocoon/heurist/73/reftype_renderer/64807" target="_new" onclick="window.open(href,\'\',\'scrollbars=1,resizable=yes, width=600,height=500\'); return false;">Dr Ina Kehrberg-Ostrasz</a><br/>Research associate/adjunct,  Research assistant<br/><b>Teaching and research interests: </b>Ina Kehrberg graduated with theses in Classical and Near Eastern Archaeology at the University of Sydney, specialising in Eastern Mediterranean cultures and ceramics. She has worked for 30 years in the Levant, concentrating on Classical sites in Jordan, in particular Jarash. Over the past 25 years she co-directed a number of excavations at Jarash (Gerasa) and collaborated with other long-term archaeological projects which led to her foundation in 2003 of the Jarash Artefacts Studies Centre / JASC located on the ancient site. She directs the ‘Jarash Hippodrome Excavations 1984-1996 Research and Publication Project’ for which she has been awarded the Harvard White-Levy Publication Grant from 2004-2007. The award has been conferred to achieve the publication of the research results by her late husband, Dr Antoni A. Ostrasz, and her own work at the hippodrome site. Her other main projects at Jarash are: 1) the Roman city walls excavations, 2) urbanization of Hellenistic to Byzantine Gerasa, and 3) the archaeological studies of the Upper Zeus Temple Project 1996-2000 in which she collaborated as Jarash specialist and appointed Fellow of the French Archaeological Institute / IFAPO. She returned to Sydney in 2004 to work on her final publications and to consolidate her research. She is Hon. Senior Fellow with the Dept of Ancient History and Classics at Macquarie University where she lectures occasionally on the Roman Near East and co-supervises two PhD theses related to her research in Jordan.<br/><br/></td></tr>'); ++rows;
document.write('  <tr><td><div style="float: right;"><img src="http://heuristscholar.org/heurist/php/resize_image.php?file_id=f7a6ab2837448e71dd73cbeb1018292954825d55"/></div><a href="http://sylvester.acl.arts.usyd.edu.au/cocoon/heurist/73/reftype_renderer/68834" target="_new" onclick="window.open(href,\'\',\'scrollbars=1,resizable=yes, width=600,height=500\'); return false;">Dr Karin Sowada</a><br/>Research associate/adjunct<br/><b>Teaching and research interests: </b>Karin Sowada graduated in archaeology from the University of Sydney in 1989, and acquired a doctorate in Egyptian archaeology from the University in 2002. In a career spanning two decades, she has worked on archaeological excavations in Egypt (Memphis, Saqqara and Theban Tombs 148, 233 and 147), Israel (Tel Yarmuth), Australia and Jordan (Pella). Karin was Assistant Curator of the Nicholson Museum at Sydney University for nine years until 2005, during which time she curated a number of exhibitions and conducted extensive research on the collection. Karin is widely published in scholarly and popular books and articles, on topics as wide-ranging as mummies, Egyptian sculpture and the archaeology of ancient cemeteries. Her main areas of research interest are economic systems and Egypt’s role in the eastern Mediterranean during the Bronze Age.<br/><br/></td></tr>'); ++rows;
document.write('  <tr><td><div style="float: right;"><img src="http://heuristscholar.org/heurist/php/resize_image.php?file_id=1cc7940f84171a2cefdb99c5da47ef5f1b65fab0"/></div><a href="http://sylvester.acl.arts.usyd.edu.au/cocoon/heurist/73/reftype_renderer/123223" target="_new" onclick="window.open(href,\'\',\'scrollbars=1,resizable=yes, width=600,height=500\'); return false;">Dr Peter White</a><br/>Research associate/adjunct<br/><b>Teaching and research interests: </b>Dr White graduated from Melbourne, Cambridge and ANU (PhD 1967). Until 2002 he was Reader in Prehistory at Sydney University. He is a Fellow of the Australian Academy of the Humanities and has edited the A-rated journal Archaeology in Oceania since 1981. He has written and edited several books and more than 100 articles. He has researched aspects of the prehistory of Near Oceania and Australia since 1963, focusing on stone artefacts (both archaeological and ethnographic), ceramics and archaeozoology. He has excavated in Australia, Papua New Guinea, New Britain and New Ireland. He is involved in studies of trade and exchange, scientific analyses and megafaunal extinction. He regularly writes overviews of the prehistory of the area, in particular during the Pleistocene. His current teaching consists of the supervision of Honours students and assisting graduate and post-doctoral students.<br/><br/></td></tr>'); ++rows;
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