Abstract

IN arranging an exhibition at the Institute of Archæology of the University of London to illustrate the achievement of field archæology in Great Britain and Northern Ireland during the five years 1933–38, the promoters have provided a conspectus of results which is continuous with those of the two exhibitions of a similar character helcl in 1929 and 1932, the latter in conjunction with the International Congress of Pre- and Protohistoric Sciences, which met in London in that year. The inevitable comparison demonstrates the very considerable advance made by archæological studies in the interval, and its direction.

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