Uzi Avner Ph.D
Research Area:
Archeology
Dr. Uzi Avner began his acquaintance with the desert in 1969 as a guide in the Eilat Field-School and began studying archaeology in the Hebrew University, Jerusalem in 1973. His researches in the archaeology of the southern Negev and Sinai began in 1977. He served as a district archaeologist of the southern Negev for the Israel Department of Antiquities, later- the Israel Antiquity Authority from 1977 to1999. In 2002 his Ph.D. dissertation, titled: “Studies in the Material and Spiritual Culture of the Desert Population During the 6th to 3rd Millennia BC,” was awarded summa cum laude by the Hebrew University, Jerusalem. Since 1999 he has lectured on desert archaeology and environment in the Arava Institute for Environmental Studies; until 2010 also in the Eilat campus of BGU. In 2007 he joined the Dead Sea-Arava Science Center through which he is running his researches. His current themes of studies are:
- Early Agricultural Settlement in Uvda Valley (6000 BC and later)
- Paleoclimate of the Southern Negev (last 10,000 years)
- Ancient Copper production in the Southern Araba (4500 BC and later)
- “Desert Kites” and Ancient Carnivore Traps (5000 BC and later)
- Ancient Farming in the Southern Araba (200 BC to 1100 AD)
- The Nabataeans in the Negev and Sinai (200 BC to 600 Ad)
- Ancient Desert Cult Sites (7000 BC to 1100 AD)
- Ancient Roads in the Desert (7000 BC to near present)
- Desert Rock-Art (7000 BC to near present).