Brian Fagan
|
Archaeology continues to be an irresistible lure to publishers, broadcasters and the general public. The 1990s saw an extraordinary number of spectacular finds across the globe and equally spectacular revelations from ever more sophisticated lab techniques. Brian Fagan, who has taught archaeology since the 1960s, reviews the brave new world of modern archaeological discovery. Published October 11 2007
|
|
Brian Fagan looks at this new title by David Keys.
Published March 1 2000
|
|
What would have happened if the native Americans had been left to their own devices? Brian Fagan probes the rise and fall of Aztec and Mayan society and proffers some intriguing observations. Published April 30 1992
|
- Home
- Location
- Period
- Themes
- Magazine
- Subscribe
- Archive
- Ebooks
- Students
- Blogs
- Contact
Newsletter
From The Current Issue
|
Chris Millington
|
|
Ian Bradley
|
|
Roger Hudson
|
|
Jonathan Fenby
|
From The Archive
|
John Kennedy’s commitment to put a man on the Moon in the 1960s is often quoted – most recently by Gordon Brown – as an inspired civic vision. Gerard DeGroot sees the reality somewhat differently. |


















