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The year 1954 in archaeology involved some significant events.
Explorations
Excavations
- Mixco Viejo, Guatemala Musée d'Homme project under the direction of Henri Lehmann starts (continues through 1967).
 - Neolithic-era site of Ashkelon discovered and excavated by French archaeologist Jean Perrot.
 - Excavations at Beycesultan by Seton Lloyd of the British Institute of Archaeology in Ankara begin (continue to 1959).
 - Excavations at Filitosa, Corsica, begin.
 - Excavations at Nagarjunakonda by the Archaeological Survey of India begin (continue to 1960).
 - Excavations at Nevasa, Maharashtra, begin (continue to 1956).
 - Excavations of the London Mithraeum conducted under the direction of W. F. Grimes.[1]
 - Systematic excavations at Niah Caves begin under the direction of the Sarawak Museum.
 
Finds
- September 18 - Marble head of Mithras from London Mithraeum unearthed in Walbrook Square by W. F. Grimes's excavation.[1]
 - Panlongcheng Erligang culture site in China discovered.
 - Khufu ship discovered in Giza pyramid complex by Kamal el-Mallakh.
 - Cape Gelidonya shipwreck discovered.
 
Miscellaneous
- Sir Mortimer Wheeler is named Television Personality of the Year in the U.K. due to his contributions to Animal, Vegetable, Mineral?[2]
 
Publications
- Maurice Beresford - The Lost Villages of England.
 - R. Allen Brown - English Medieval Castles.
 - Grahame Clark - Excavations at Star Carr, an early Mesolithic site at Seamer near Scarborough, Yorkshire.
 - V. E. Nash-Williams - The Roman Frontier in Wales.
 - Stuart Piggott - The Neolithic Cultures of the British Isles: a study of the stone-using agricultural communities of Britain in the second millennium B.C.
 
Births
- July 1 - William Rathje, American archaeologist and garbologist (d. 2012)
 - Barbara Tsakirgis, American classical archaeologist (d. 2019)
 
Deaths
- March 6 - Sir John Myres, English archaeologist of Cyprus (b. 1869)
 - April 10 - Ludwig Curtius, German Classical archaeologist (b. 1874)
 - July 16 - Henri Frankfort, Dutch-born Egyptologist (b. 1897)
 - October 5 - Alfred Tozzer, American Mesoamerican archaeologist (b. 1877)
 
References
- 1 2 "Plans to dismantle and move the reconstructed roman temple of Mithras to temporary storage, ahead of a more faithful reconstruction, will begin on the 21 November 2011 by Museum of London Archaeology". Heritage Daily. 2011-11-18. Retrieved 2012-12-28.
 - ↑ Kulik, Karol (2007). "A Short History of Archaeological Communication". In Clack, Timothy; Brittain, Marcus (eds.). Archaeology and the Media. Walnut Creek, CA: Left Coast Press. pp. 111–124. ISBN 9781598742336.
 
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