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The objective of Walking through Jordan is to acknowledge and honor the singular achievements and wider impacts of Jordan's most prominent survey archaeologist, Burton MacDonald. MacDonald is a biblical scholar by training who has written extensively about the Iron Age and early Christianity. However, unlike many biblical scholars, MacDonald has also undertaken large regional survey projects which encompass the entire gamut of Jordanian prehistory and history. Thus, his work is unique in that it attracts the interest of a wide range of scholars. Contributing scholars from around the world reflect on three important areas of MacDonald's archaeological contributions: on archaeological survey in general, including those focusing on methodology and/or field projects that depend to a large extent on surveys, MacDonald's five major surveys--papers that incorporate data from his field projects and sites tested or excavated by others that were first identified by his work, and the archaeology of the Bronze and Iron Ages, as well as the Roman Period and the early Christian era. Despite his important contributions to prehistoric archaeology, the early historical periods constitute the main emphasis of Burton's scholarly output.1. Introduction Michael P. Neeley, Geoffrey A. Clark, and P. M. Michele Daviau 2. An Early Bronze Age Basalt Bowl and Macehead from Khirbat al-Mudayna ath-Thamad Steven Edwards, PhD candidate, University of Toronto 3. A Newly Discovered Iron Age II Cave Tomb at Khirbat al-Mudayna on the Wadi ath-Thamad Robert Chadwick, Bishops University, Sherbrooke, Quebec, Canada 4. Industrial Furnishings at Khirbat al-Mudayna ath-Thamad: Clues from Egyptian Culture P. M. Michele Daviau 5. North Jordan during the Early Iron Age: An Historic and Archaeological Synthesis Zeidan A. Kafafi, Yarmouk University in Irbid, Jordan 6. Nelson Glueck's Madaba line and the Tall Madaba Archaeological Project Jonathan Ferguson, PhD candidate, University of Toronto 7. The Finnish lĂL
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