Archaeology at the Israel Museum - This museum in Jerusalem provides online exhibitions and an illustrated catalog of its collections from prehistory until the thirteenth century.
Cave of the Warrior, Wadi el-Makkukh - An exhibition at the American Museum of Natural History 1998: includes illustrated description of artifacts found.
From Archaeology to Archaeometry and Back - Describes the work of Hebrew University professor Jan Gunneweg on the archaeology of Israel and the eastern Mediterranean.
Herodian - Brief article by Jay Levinson in The Jewish Magazine describes this fortified palace located 15 kilometers south of Yerushalayim. With photos.
Inscriptions from the Land of Israel Peoject - Seeks to collect and make accessible over the Web all of the previously published inscriptions (and their English translations) from the Land of Israel from the Persian period through the Islamic conquest (ca. 500 BCE - 640 CE).
Israel Antiquities Authority - The official site explains its services and policy. Also examples of the country's rich archaeological heritage, news, exhibitions and publications.
Nahal Tillah Regional Archaeology Project in Israel - The University of California at San Diego examines the role of early Egyptian civilization in the rise of urban communities in the southern Levant. Aims, staff, publications.
Ritmeyer Archaeological Design - Focuses on the Temple Mount and Jerusalem. Offers research, books, posters, CD-ROM's and models on the subject of Jerusalem and Biblical Archaeology.
Robert Deutsch - Archaeologist and epigraphist: includes bibliography, articles and photographs.
The Roman Boat from the Sea of Galilee - The Israeli Ministry of Foreign Affairs describes the discovery in 1986 of a boat constructed and used between 100 BCE and 70 CE.
Second Temple Synagogues - Donald D. Binder's study of synagogues built before A.D. 70. Texts, illustrations, plans, and descriptions.
Strange Skulls - In a dry region southwest of the Dead Sea, Neolithic peoples at Nahal Hemar Cave stashed stone masks, jewelry, shells, and skulls decorated with thick black glue.
Tel Dan - History and archaeology of the northernmost area of Israel.
Tel Quasile - A late Bronze Age and Philistine site in Tel Aviv.
The Yaqush Project - Brief description of work at this Early Bronze Age site in the upper Jordan Valley.
Farming Origins Gain 10,000 Years - Brief article from the BBC News about principal plant foods eaten by the people at Ohalo. (June 23, 2004)
Early Man Had Mining in Mind - From Nature, an Israeli research team has caught our ancestors in the act of learning to mine raw materials for tools. (May 18, 2004)
Earliest Fire Sheds Light on Hominids - Nature article on ancient hearths unearthed in Israel considered to be nearly 800 millennia old. (April 30, 2004)