NZ in a water hemisphereWelcome to Garry Law's:
New Zealand Archaeology Page

 

"The one duty we owe to history is to rewrite it"  Oscar Wilde. 1891. The Critic as Artist.


"A thing belongs to the one who remembers it most obsessively" Kanan Makiya.  2001. The Rock: A tale of seventh-century Jerusalem


"About thirty years ago there was much talk that geologists ought only to observe and not theorise; and I remember some one saying that at this rate a man might well go into a gravel-pit and count the pebbles and describe their colours. How odd it is that anyone should not see that all observation must be for or against some view if it is to be of service."  Charles Darwin 1861.


"Problems can not be solved at the same level of consciousness that created them."  Albert Einstein


"Archaeologists ought to be grateful to worms, as they protect and preserve for an indefinitely long period every object, not liable to decay, which is dropped on the surface of the land, by burying it beneath their casting."  Charles Darwin 1881


"The hardest thing about being a communist is trying to predict the past."    Milovan Djilas (1911-1995), Yugoslav  author-politician.
Djilas was warning apparatchiks rather than Marxist archaeologists - but still .... 


"You never know how the past is going to turn out." Jude Quinn in I'm Not There, 2007


Garry Law
About me

This page is mainly about New Zealand archaeology. It's got some good archaeological links for New Zealand and this part of the world, some papers I have written but not published and a bibliography of the ones I have. The Blog below is some personal observations which I might make from time to time.

Archaeology in New Zealand is practiced in respect of the Maori (Polynesian) occupation of New Zealand (including the Kermadec Islands to the north and Chatham Islands in the east), starting perhaps 800 years ago, but also in respect of historic sites left by more recent visitors and immigrants, European and Chinese, since 1800 AD, looking at settlements and sealing, whaling and mining industries.

New Zealand archaeology relates particularly to New Zealand of course, but archaeologists based here also work in Polynesia, the rest of Oceania, particularly on Polynesian origins and also in South East Asia - particularly Thailand. There is also some research on historic sites in Antarctica. There are close professional relationships with Australian archaeologists and a quite a few there have come from here, but little research is conducted across the Tasman Sea in either direction.

BLOG:


Friday, 19 February 2010

Strangeness on Maungawhau
The Pou

The Maori inscription

The other inscription ??????

The sign

What on earth is this about?

 

The principal organisation for archaeologists in New Zealand is the New Zealand Archaeological Association.

My interests include: C14 dating, numerical taxonomy, social implications of spatial patterning in sites and landscapes, site protection in development projects and museums.  


Site of the day - 29 Jan 2001
And 28 Aug 2002


 

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Auckland, August 1908: A Stop on the Great White Fleet World Cruise 
By: Garry Law

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