Frank Hole
Rice University
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Frank Hole.
Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society | 1968
Frank Hole; Kent V. Flannery
Current research on the prehistory of the Near East is proceeding at a pace unmatched since the ‘golden era of archaeology’ immediately preceding World War II. Iran, because of its great archeological potential and its stable political situation, has become a prime target for new investigations. Expeditions from the United States, Great Britain, Denmark, France, and Japan have all made substantial contributions to knowledge of Iranian prehistory in the last five years. One recurrent problem in the new research, however, is a lack of coordination and communication between expeditions, which means that many opportunities for useful cooperation are lost. For example, in 1961 we surveyed in some 15 valleys in western Iran, plotting the distribution of pre-Uruk settlements. Unbeknown to us, at least one American and one Danish survey team crossed our path, duplicated many of our survey runs, and excavated one of the sites found on our project. We later learned that we, in turn, had duplicated several survey runs made previously by a British team, who were interested mainly in later sites but would have been happy to share their data on sites in our range of interest. Had all of us known what our colleagues were doing, we could have saved ourselves many hours of duplication. This situation is worsened by the fact that many surveys and test-excavations remain unpublished, and diagnostic artifacts remain undescribed. With regard to pottery sequences, the urgency of the problem has recently been stressed by one of our colleagues (Young 1966: footnote 28).
Science | 1962
Frank Hole
Recent surface survey for prehistoric archeological sites in western Iran has contributed toward defining three centers of early agricultural village settlement. Excavation at a site in upper Khuzistan revealed a sequence of settled life which, at its earliest, may antedate food production. The site also yielded faunal evidence for an ecological change subsequent to the end of the Pleistocene.
Current Anthropology | 1992
Ofer Bar-Yosef; Bernard Vandermeersch; Baruch Arensburg; Anna Belfer-Cohen; Paul Goldberg; Henri Laville; Liliane Meignen; Y. Rak; J. D. Speth; Eitan Tchernov; A-M. Tillier; Steve Weiner; Gregory Clark; Andrew N. Garrard; Donald O. Henry; Frank Hole; Derek Roe; Karen R. Rosenberg; Lynne A. Schepartz; John J. Shea; Fred H. Smith; Erik Trinkaus; Norman M. Whalen; Lucy Wilson
Archive | 1969
Frank Hole; Kent V. Flannery; James A. Neely
Current Anthropology | 1974
Robert McC. Adams; J. M. Adovasio; Burchard Brentjes; H. Neville Chittick; Yehudi A. Cohen; Rolf Gundlach; Frank Hole; William H. McNeill; James Mellaart; Janice Stargardt; Bruce G. Trigger; Gary A. Wright; Henry T. Wright
Archive | 1969
Frank Hole; Kent V. Flannery; James A. Neely; Hans Helbaek; Cyril S. Smith; Colin Renfrew; I. W. Conwall
Science | 1966
Frank Hole
Current Anthropology | 1965
Frank Hole; Kent V. Flannery; James A. Neely
Archive | 1977
Frank Hole; M. J. Kirkby; Colin Renfrew
Science | 1988
Frank Hole