Open Call for Papers and Reviewers
Archaeology in Washington is seeking scholarly papers from professionals in archaeology, historic preservation, and related fields who are working in Washington or the surrounding areas. Papers submitted to the journal will undergo a process of double-blind peer review and editing before publication.
The journal is also seeking topical or reflective essays from professionals in archaeology, historic preservation, and related fields, provided these essays are sufficiently relevant to historic preservation professionals in Washington state. Essays submitted to the journal will undergo a process of double-blind peer review and editing before publication. Please contact the editor to propose an essay topic before submission for peer review.
Peer reviewers are also needed. If you are a professional in archaeology, historic preservation, or a related field and would like to volunteer as a peer reviewer, or if you would like to submit a paper or propose an essay topic, please email Amanda Taylor, Editor of Archaeology in Washington.
Volume 17 Now Available Online to Subscribers
AiW Vol. 17, which is a special thematic issue focused on the archaeology of Japanese Americans in Washington, is now available online to subscribers. This volume contains six new papers and presents discussion of archaeological work at five different locations in Washington. This is the first new volume of AiW to be published entirely online, and the first volume in any form since 2014 (Volume 16 was released in 2014 but backdated to 2010).
Volume 18 will be also be published online within the next few weeks, and this volume will contain two papers. One paper was edited, accepted, and formatted for publication by former editor Dr. Pat Lubinski, and is being published after the death of its author. The other paper in this volume represents a new study edited and accepted by Jack Johnson, AiW Editor from 2015 to 2017. Publication of this volume marks the end of Jack's tenure as Editor of AiW.
Archaeology in Washington is seeking scholarly papers from professionals in archaeology, historic preservation, and related fields who are working in Washington or the surrounding areas. Papers submitted to the journal will undergo a process of double-blind peer review and editing before publication.
The journal is also seeking topical or reflective essays from professionals in archaeology, historic preservation, and related fields, provided these essays are sufficiently relevant to historic preservation professionals in Washington state. Essays submitted to the journal will undergo a process of double-blind peer review and editing before publication. Please contact the editor to propose an essay topic before submission for peer review.
Peer reviewers are also needed. If you are a professional in archaeology, historic preservation, or a related field and would like to volunteer as a peer reviewer, or if you would like to submit a paper or propose an essay topic, please email Amanda Taylor, Editor of Archaeology in Washington.
Volume 17 Now Available Online to Subscribers
AiW Vol. 17, which is a special thematic issue focused on the archaeology of Japanese Americans in Washington, is now available online to subscribers. This volume contains six new papers and presents discussion of archaeological work at five different locations in Washington. This is the first new volume of AiW to be published entirely online, and the first volume in any form since 2014 (Volume 16 was released in 2014 but backdated to 2010).
Volume 18 will be also be published online within the next few weeks, and this volume will contain two papers. One paper was edited, accepted, and formatted for publication by former editor Dr. Pat Lubinski, and is being published after the death of its author. The other paper in this volume represents a new study edited and accepted by Jack Johnson, AiW Editor from 2015 to 2017. Publication of this volume marks the end of Jack's tenure as Editor of AiW.