rom the Department’s inception, the importance of publishing research results in a timely manner was paramount. For more than a year, the Executive Committee debated the appropriate nature of potential publication series, and a distinction ultimately was made between ethnographic and archaeological work in the Americas and archaeological studies in Egypt. The first several series, some produced jointly with affiliated institutions, included the following.
- University of California Publications in American Archaeology and Ethnology (1903-1964)
- University of California Publications in Egyptian Archaeology (1905)
- University of California Anthropological Records (1937-1991)
- University of California Archaeological Survey Reports (1948-1972)
- Kroeber Anthropological Society Papers (1949- ) The oldest graduate student-run anthropological series in America.
- University of California Publications in Anthropology (1964- )
- Contributions of the Archaeological Research Facility (1965- )
- Anthropology Facilities, 1902-1960
Edward Winslow and Delila S. Gifford
“Archaeological Excavations in Yap”
Anthropological Records (Volume 18, Number 2)
Berkeley, University of California Press, 1959
The Giffords worked in Yap from 27 January to 2 June 1952, studying the prehistory of outer Oceania, and supporting the Department’s expanded international interests following World War II. Two similar efforts were also mounted in Viti Levu, Fiji, in 1947 and New Caledonia in 1952.
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