<!-- "none" is preferred when the title is sufficiently descriptive; see WP:SDNONE -->

The year 1964 in archaeology involved some significant events.

Excavations

  • Seibal Harvard University project begins under direction of Gordon R. Willey and A. Ledyard Smith.
  • Et-Tell excavations under Joseph Callaway begin (continue through 1970).
  • Saqqara excavations under Bryan Emery begin (continue through 1971).
  • Pool of Bethesda excavations.
  • Snaketown by Emil Haury, with assistance from E. B. Sayles, Erik K. Reed, and Irwin and Julian Hayden.
  • Ebla excavations by the University of Rome La Sapienza directed by Paolo Matthiae begin.
  • Excavations in Hane, Marquesas Islands, by Yosihiko H. Sinoto begin.
  • Tomb of Princess Yongtai excavated in Qianling Mausoleum, China.
  • The Missione Archaeologica Italiana a Malta begins excavations at Ras il-Wardija, Gozo, Malta (continues through 1967).
  • First full-scale excavation of Roman villa at Oplontis in Italy begins.
  • Archaeological site of Atapuerca in Spain directed by Francisco Jordá Cerdá.
  • Argentine surveyor and archaeologist Carlos J. Gradin and his team begins the most profound research on Cueva de las Manos in a 30-year-long study of the caves and their art.
  • Excavation of Tel Arad by Yohanan Aharoni (continues until 1967).

Finds

thumb|upright|The Finglesham Buckle is on display at the [[Ashmolean Museum]]

  • Getty Victorious Youth in the sea off Fano.
  • The second trove of Qabala treasures in Azerbaijan.
  • Mummies on Pichu Pichu in the Peruvian Andes.
  • Teeth from Grotta del Cavallo in southern Italy, identified in 2011 as the oldest known remains of European early modern humans.
  • Pyrgi Tablets at the site of ancient Pyrgi in Lazio, Italy.
  • A buckle depicting a man holding a spear in each hand is discovered at Finglesham Anglo-Saxon cemetery during excavations led by Sonia Chadwick Hawkes.

Events

  • May 31 – The Venice Charter for the Conservation and Restoration of Monuments and Sites is adopted by the Second International Congress of Architects and Specialists of Historic Buildings.
  • November 30 – Western Australian Museum Act Amendment Act provides for protection of pre-1900 wrecks in local waters.
  • Project to move the Abu Simbel temples to prevent their inundation by the Aswan High Dam begins.

Publications

  • L. Sprague de Camp and Catherine Crook de Camp - Ancient Ruins and Archaeology.
  • Journal of Industrial Archaeology begins publication.

Awards

  • Ian Richmond knighted.

Births

  • February – Duan Qingbo, Chinese archaeologist (died 2019)

Deaths

References