Volume 54 / Number 3

2012

Special Edition: 125 Years and Still Exploring

On The Cover: Nippur in modern Iraq excavated by the Penn Museum from 1889 to 1900. John Punnett Peters, John Henry Haynes, and Herman Volrath Hilprecht led the Museum's work at the site. Haynes took this photograph in 1899.

Vol. 54 / No. 3

By: Alessandro Pezzati

Furness in Borneo and East Asia

William Henry Furness III, scion of a notable Philadelphia family that included architect Frank Furness and Shakespearean scholar Horace Howard […]

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Vol. 54 / No. 3

By: Alessandro Pezzati

The Importance of Conservation at the Museum

In the early years, restoration or reconstruction work was carried out by curators and their assistants, whether it was baking […]

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Vol. 54 / No. 3

By: Alessandro Pezzati

The Eccentric Maxwell Sommerville

Maxwell Sommerville (1829–1904) was one of the most colorful characters associated with the early days of the Museum. The first […]

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beaver bowl

Vol. 54 / No. 3

By: William Wierzbowski

The Beaver Bowl

This wooden bowl was collected among the Kaskaskia (a sub-group of the Miami people) by George Turner, a judge in […]

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Vol. 54 / No. 3

By: Alessandro Pezzati

The Accidental Mayanist: Tatiana Proskouriakoff

Of all the brilliant minds that have lit up the firmament of ancient Maya studies, there is none that arouses […]

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Vol. 54 / No. 3

Frank Speck and the Anthropology Department

Frank Gouldsmith Speck (1881 – 1950) is best known for his research among remnant populations and highly acculturated groups of […]

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Vol. 54 / No. 3

By: Alessandro Pezzati

William Farabee, Martyr to Science

William Curtis Farabee (1865–1925) is one of the great forgotten American explorers and anthropologists. He obtained his Ph.D. from Harvard […]

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Vol. 54 / No. 3

By: Alessandro Pezzati

Moroccan Pottery in the African Collection

Talcott Williams, one of the early officers of the Museum, was an editor of the Philadelphia Press for 30 years. […]

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Vol. 54 / No. 3

By: Alessandro Pezzati

Big Game at the Museum

Natural history specimens collected by Arthur Donaldson Smith were on display in 1898 in the University Library, now the Fine […]

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Vol. 54 / No. 3

By: Alessandro Pezzati, Jane Hickman and Alexandra Fleischman

A Brief History of the Penn Museum

The founding of the University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology was part of the great wave of institution-building […]

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Vol. 54 / No. 3

By: Alessandro Pezzati

An Angu Funeral in New Guinea

Born in 1919, Ward Goodenough is a world-renowned linguist and anthropologist, who has studied the connection between language and culture […]

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Vol. 54 / No. 3

By: Alessandro Pezzati

Eckley Brinton Coxe, Jr.: Patron Saint of the Museum

His frail body sheltered the spirit of a courteous gentleman of high culture and lovable and gentle character. There are […]

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Vol. 54 / No. 3

By: Alessandro Pezzati

George Byron Gordon and the Chinese Collection

George Byron Gordon (1870–1927) was born of Scottish-English ancestry on Prince Edward Island, Canada. After obtaining his Ph.D. at Harvard, […]

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Vol. 54 / No. 3

By: KC Boas

The Curious Cabinet of Dr. Morton

Update on the Morton collection For updates on the Museum’s work towards the repatriation and burial of the Morton Collection, […]

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Vol. 54 / No. 3

By: Alessandro Pezzati

Nippur and Hamdi Bey

The 1889–1900 excavations at Nippur in Mesopotamia led to the founding of the Penn Museum. They were immortalized on canvas […]

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Vol. 54 / No. 3

By: Alessandro Pezzati

The Purchase, Theft, and Recovery of the Crystal Ball

The Chinese crystal sphere, on display in the Harrison Rotunda, has been an iconic object in the Museum since 1927, […]

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Vol. 54 / No. 3

By: Alessandro Pezzati

John Cotter, Archaeologist of Philadelphia

Though based in Philadelphia, the Penn Museum has often neglected the American past to search for places more distant in […]

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Vol. 54 / No. 3

By: Alessandro Pezzati

The Controversial Carleton Coon

Carleton S. Coon (1904–1981) was a Curator and Professor at the University of Pennsylvania until his retirement in 1963. He […]

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Vol. 54 / No. 3

By: Alessandro Pezzati

Schmidt at Tepe Hissar

In 1931 Museum archaeologists were the first Americans to excavate in Persia (Iran), at the site of Tepe Hissar, under […]

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Vol. 54 / No. 3

By: Alessandro Pezzati

Replicas of Famous Monuments of the Past

Reproductions of famous monuments were an important part of the Museum’s educational mission in its early years, before the increasing […]

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Vol. 54 / No. 3

By: Alessandro Pezzati

A Telegram of Discovery from Ur

On January 4, 1928, the Museum received a telegram from Leonard Woolley announcing his great find of the tomb of […]

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Vol. 54 / No. 3

By: Jennifer H. Wegner

The Granite Sphinx of Ramesses II

Excavated by W. M. Flinders Petrie in 1913 near the Ptah Temple at Memphis, the Penn Museum’s twelve-ton sphinx is […]

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Vol. 54 / No. 3

By: Jane Hickman

Every Picture Tells a Story: From the Editor

When I began editing Expedition almost four years ago, I was unaware of the many wonderful stories associated with those […]

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Vol. 54 / No. 3

By: Julian Siggers

The Adventure Continues: From the Director

A major anniversary is a wonderful reason for an institution to reflect on the people, events, and achievements that have […]

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Vol. 54 / No. 3

By: Alexandra Fleischman

Women Archaeologists in the Early Days of the Museum

A portrait of Sara Yorke Stevenson (1847–1921) hangs in the Penn Museum Archives, a tribute to this dynamic woman’s crucial […]

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