An archaeologist with the Cyprus Department of Antiquities, Marina Solomidou-Ieronymidou (“The Guardians of Tamassos”) has excavated at Kourion and other Cypriot sites, and she has written extensively on Byzantine art and Cyprus’s Crusader and medieval periods.
Jelle Zeilinga de Boer (“Was She Really Stoned? The Oracle of Delphi”) is a professor of earth and environmental sciences at Wesleyan University in Connecticut. A specialist in the geotectonics of the Appalachians, Southeast Asia, and South and Central America, de Boer is the author of Volcanoes in Human History: The Far-Reaching Effects of Major Eruptions (Princeton University Press, 2001).
Co-author John R. Hale’s interests range from the Delphic Oracle to Phoenician ships in the harbors of ancient Iberia. An archaeologist with the University of Louisville, he is currently writing a book on the history and archaeology of the Athenian navy.
An archaeologist with the Cyprus Department of Antiquities, Marina Solomidou-Ieronymidou (“The Guardians of Tamassos”) has excavated at Kourion and other Cypriot sites, and she has written extensively on Byzantine art and Cyprus’s Crusader and medieval periods. Jelle Zeilinga de Boer (“Was She Really Stoned? The Oracle of Delphi”) is a professor of earth and environmental sciences at Wesleyan University in Connecticut. A specialist in the geotectonics of the Appalachians, Southeast Asia, and South and Central America, de Boer is the author of Volcanoes in Human History: The Far-Reaching Effects of Major Eruptions (Princeton University Press, 2001). Co-author John R. […]
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