1911 in archaeology
Explorations
    
- 24 July: Hiram Bingham III rediscovers Machu Picchu, Peru.
 
Excavations
    
- Excavations of the ruins of Tell el-Amarna, Egypt, by Ludwig Borchardt of the Deutsche Orient-Gesellschaft (continues to 1914).
 - First excavations of ancient Samarra, Iraq, by Ernst Herzfeld (continues to 1914).
 - First excavations of Tell Halaf, Syria, by Max von Oppenheim (continues to 1913).
 - Excavations of the Hittite city of Carchemish, northern Syria, by D. G. Hogarth of the Ashmolean Museum with Leonard Woolley and T. E. Lawrence (continues to 1914).
 - First excavations of Hengistbury Head by J. P. Bushe-Fox.
 - First excavations at Beit Shemesh (continues to 1912).
 - Excavations at the necropolis of Tanagra (Boeotia) by Nikolaos Papadakis.[1]
 
Publications
    
- James Curle: A Roman Frontier Post and its People: the Fort of Newstead.
 - Grafton Elliot Smith: The Ancient Egyptians and the Origin of Civilization.
 
Finds
    
- Venus of Laussel.
 - First artefacts found at Dolní Věstonice.
 - Magdalenian Girl.
 - Clacton Spear.
 
Births
    
    
Deaths
    
- 19 August: John Robert Mortimer, Yorkshire archaeologist (born 1825)
 
References
    
- "The scientific work". Archaeological Museum of Thebes. Retrieved 2017-11-23.
 
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