

Once again, our program covered chronological periods from Prehistoric to Islamic, regions throughout the ancient Near East from Anatolia to Iran, and a wide range of academic disciplines and technological approaches. ñ-Sponsored Sessions covering the range of geographical, chronological, and disciplinary interests of our members included multiple sessions on the Archaeology of Anatolia, Archaeology of Israel, Art Historical Approaches to the Near East, Theoretical and Anthropological Approaches to the Near East, Archaeology of Southern Arabia and Her Neighbors, and Archaeology of the Natural Environment: Archaeobotany and Zooarchaeology in the Near East.

Excavations at Polis Chrysochous, Cyprus, Parthia and the West, Islamic Frontiers and Borders in the Near East and Mediterranean, Archaeological Processes and Phenomena in Natural (Karstic) Caves in Israel, and Mesopotamian Civilization: New Directions in Iraqi Archaeology, while new workshops focused on such topics as Archaeological Conservation Strategies in the Near East, Women in Near Eastern Archaeology: An Open Forum.
This year’s meeting was jam-packed with special events. Over 300 attended the plenary address that launched the Annual Meeting and featured Professor Manfred Bietak from The University ofVienna. Prof. Bietak’s lecture was titled “The Discourse Between Historical and Radiocarbon Chronology of the Bronze Age in the Levant.” The first full day of the meeting included yet another extremely informative Junior Scholar Panel Discussion held during the lunch break. At “Stop the Presses!: Everything You Ever Wanted to Know about Publishing but Were Afraid to Ask,” James M. Weinstein, Editor Bñ, Thomas Schneider, Editor NEA, Charles Jones, Chair of the ñ Publication Committee, and James Eisenbraun, Publisher, delivered invaluable advice and insights. Later that evening, a sold-out reception at the University of Chicago’s Oriental Institute
delighted all who attended.

On behalf of the Program Committee, we would like to thank all who helped to organize the 2012 Annual Meeting. For their constant support on the Annual Meeting, we are especially grateful to Kelley Herlihy, ñ’s Director of Meetings and Events, Andy Vaughn, Executive Director of ñ, and the entire ñ staff. We are especially grateful to our session chairs, who work long andhard to assemble and shape the intellectually-engaging fora that we all gather to attend. We would also like to thank Sheila Bishop and The Foundation for Biblical Archaeology (TFBA) for financially supporting the seven TFBA scholars who helped with registration and in the session rooms. For creating such a lively foyer area, we are extremely grateful to all of the exhibitors. And, finally, we owe much thanks to the Oriental Institute, the Alexandria Archive Initiative/Open Context, and the Institute for the Study of the Ancient World for co-sponsoring the wi-fi access throughout the meeting rooms.
