This paper summarizes the activities carried out by the joint Libyan-Italian Archaeological Mission in the Acacus and Messak (SW Libya) from 2009 until today. The structure of the paper is organized in 2 parts: i) fieldwork in Libya (2009, 2010, and 2011), until the beginning of the Libyan Revolution; ii) main lines of lab-based research, and scientific activities developed after February 2011. During the 2009-2015 interval, the Libyan-Italian Mission has extensively published in several journals together with a monograph added to the Arid Zone Archaeology Series. At present (September 2015), despite all the efforts for a national reconciliation, it is still difficult to foresee the future evolution of the conflict in Libya. The immediate p...
The paper discusses the potential of a collaborative scheme for the development of a protocol for re...
Little archaeological research has been conducted in Western Sahara as a result of the territorial c...
The Kel Tadrart Tuareg, desert pastoralists from the Tadrart Acacus massif in Libya, were the subjec...
The Messak plateau contains remarkable evidence of human occupation during prehistoric and historic ...
The Messak plateau contains remarkable evidence of human occupation during prehistoric and historic ...
In Libya, prehistoric research has centered on the Fezzan region, the southern area of the country w...
Following the 2011 “Arab spring”, archaeological research in large parts of the Sahara is still at a...
none4nonoincarico nell'ambito della collaborazione per la ricerca su Libyan Archaeobotany (vedi prog...
none4nonoincarico nell'ambito della collaborazione per la ricerca su Libyan Archaeobotany (vedi prog...
Libya’s archaeological heritage is under serious threat, not only because of recent conflict, but al...
The article deals with the historical reconstruction of the creation of a Garamantian limes, formed ...
This is the first in a series of chair’s notes in Libyan Studies. We hope that future notes will add...
The increasing tourist activity and the expansion of oil prospecting in Libya represent a dramatic d...
The results of a geo-archaeological survey in an area south of Kufra (SE Libya) are discussed. The c...
This paper, based on an Olwen Brogan Memorial Lecture presented to the Society for Libyan Studies on...
The paper discusses the potential of a collaborative scheme for the development of a protocol for re...
Little archaeological research has been conducted in Western Sahara as a result of the territorial c...
The Kel Tadrart Tuareg, desert pastoralists from the Tadrart Acacus massif in Libya, were the subjec...
The Messak plateau contains remarkable evidence of human occupation during prehistoric and historic ...
The Messak plateau contains remarkable evidence of human occupation during prehistoric and historic ...
In Libya, prehistoric research has centered on the Fezzan region, the southern area of the country w...
Following the 2011 “Arab spring”, archaeological research in large parts of the Sahara is still at a...
none4nonoincarico nell'ambito della collaborazione per la ricerca su Libyan Archaeobotany (vedi prog...
none4nonoincarico nell'ambito della collaborazione per la ricerca su Libyan Archaeobotany (vedi prog...
Libya’s archaeological heritage is under serious threat, not only because of recent conflict, but al...
The article deals with the historical reconstruction of the creation of a Garamantian limes, formed ...
This is the first in a series of chair’s notes in Libyan Studies. We hope that future notes will add...
The increasing tourist activity and the expansion of oil prospecting in Libya represent a dramatic d...
The results of a geo-archaeological survey in an area south of Kufra (SE Libya) are discussed. The c...
This paper, based on an Olwen Brogan Memorial Lecture presented to the Society for Libyan Studies on...
The paper discusses the potential of a collaborative scheme for the development of a protocol for re...
Little archaeological research has been conducted in Western Sahara as a result of the territorial c...
The Kel Tadrart Tuareg, desert pastoralists from the Tadrart Acacus massif in Libya, were the subjec...