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Hellenistic
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  Maecenas: Images of Ancient Greece and Rome http://wings.buffalo.edu/AandL/Maecenas/
Photographs by Leo Curran, University of Buffalo, of Classical remains across Europe, with some models and reconstructions of their original appearance. Searchable.
  Hellenic Alexandria http://www.greece.org/alexandria/
Project aims to highlight the Hellenic cultural presence in Alexandria, the city founded by Alexander the Great.
  Parthenon Marbles http://www.uk.digiserve.com/mentor/marbles/
Ian Swindale and his students in Crete present the history of the magnificent frieze and sculptures from the Parthenon in Athens and the campaign to return to Greece those now in the British Museum.
  Olbia Excavations http://www.tlc.kherson.ua/~info/arch.htm
Excavation summary and images of the Greek colony of Olbia.
  The Helike Project http://www.helike.org/
Ongoing investigation details of a major archeological site.
  An Ancient Greek Computer http://www.mlahanas.de/Greeks/SCAMKythera.htm
Uncovered during a dive in 1901, near the isle of Antikythera. Page describes the components of what may be an early astronomical calculator thought to come from ancient Greece. Includes photos and sketches of the mechanical device. From the Scientific American magazine.
  Greek Classical Archaeology http://www.dartmouth.edu/~grs22/
Dartmouth College classical archaeology course: City-States and Panhellenic Sanctuaries 480 - 323 B.C.E.
  Colonization of the Black Sea by the Ancient Greeks http://www.transoxiana.com.ar/Eran/Articles/bondyrev.html
An article by Igor V. Bondyrev. Peculiarity of geographic position and abundance of natural resources as well as unusual situation in home policy of Greece itself, complicated by the beginning of ecological crisis in regional ecosystems in Ancient Greece, all these made separate city-states to seek new sources for revenue on the coast of the Golden Fleece.
  Greeks 'borrowed Egyptian Numbers http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/3109806.stm
From BBC, The classical pioneers of mathematics, astronomy and physics borrowed their number system from Egypt, research suggests.

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