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June, 2008
Global Heritage Fund Executive Director, Jeff Morgan,
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January, 2008
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October, 2007
GHF Cyrene Featured in The New York Times

September, 2007
GHF Cyrene Featured in Daily Telegraph. Quote from Stefaan Poortman, Manager, International Development

December, 2006
Protecting Precious Places

December, 2006
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January, 2006
Architecture: Monumental Task: Funding the Race Against Time

January, 2006
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May, 2008
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May, 2008
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Saving One Heritage Site at a Time

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Ruins not yet ruined by too many tourists

January, 2008
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November, 2007
Prince Charles visits Ancient Site in Anatolia to Commemorate new Site Museum and Visitors Center

Fall 2007
Saving the Mirador Basin. GHF featured in American Archaeology Magazine

July, 2007
Global Heritage Google Earth Outreach Launch

June, 2007
Site-seeing: Reports from the Field: Along the Nakbe Trail

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Fire Alerts Go Global

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January 7, 2007
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Atop the world of the Maya

December 31, 2006
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December 15, 2006
GHF Mirador Featured in Daily Mail

Nov, Dec 2006
The Mission for Mirador: Ecoconservationists are working to save Guatemala's wilderness, wildlife, and ruins

September 12, 2006
The United States Department of the Interior and the Government of Guatemala Sign Memorandum of Understanding to Protect Major Maya Archaeological Sites at El Mirador

August, 2006
A Home for the Indus - GHF's support of Indus Valley research, excavations and museums in Gujarat

August 18, 2006
Iraq's ancient gem - GHF mentioned in Arizona Daily Star article

July 4, 2006
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June 30, 2006
Indus Heritage Center Explores Ancient India Roots

June 17, 2006
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June, 17, 2006
The Ties That Divide - KARS: Locals dream of reopening the frontier between Turkey and Armenia

May, 2006
On Ancient Walls, a New Maya Epoch

March, 2006
Scanning Our Heritage. Laser Scanning For Cultural Heritage Applications. US Berkeley team scanning GHF Project, Chavín de Huántar

February 25, 2006
GHF Chavin de Huantar Featured on History Channel's 'Digging for the Truth'

February 10, 2006
Into The Wild - Searching The Jungle For Buried Mayan Treasure In Guatemala

January 25, 2006
$10m Museum to Re-Visit an Ancient Civilisation

January 17, 2006
Flip side of World Heritage status

December 24, 2005
GHF and Jindal Group to rebuild Hampi

December 20, 2005
GHF Founding Investor Bill Draper Featured in San Francisco Chronicle
Draper Fellowship Awarded to Global Heritage Fund in 2003

December 10, 2005
Running after fabulous ruins - Global Heritage Fund featured in The Hindu for work in Hampi UNESCO World Heritage site, Karnataka, India

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GHF's Conservation in Shanxi Province Featured in Wall Street Journal - 'History's Last Salvation'

November, 2005
Global Heritage Fund Kars Heritage Program Featured on CNN Turkey

November 12, 2005
In Guatemala, A Battle Over Logs And a Lost Kingdom. Mr. Hansen Aims to Preserve Vast Mayan Ruin as Park; Skeptical, Villagers Fight

October 5 2005
Jeff Morgan's global approach to preservation could bring tourism, stability to postwar Iraq. Cornell University Chronicle Online article

October 2005
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August 24, 2005
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May 2005
Saving Our Global Heritage. GHF's CEO, Jeff Morgan, Featured in Gentry Magazine. (1.57 PDF)

April 28, 2005
Repairing Lost Monuments in Vietnam. GHF featured on ABC Vietnam special
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March 31, 2005
El Mirador Nominated as World Heritage Site. ElPeriodico article

March 31, 2005
El Mirador to be declared cultural heritage. Siglo article

April 18, 2005
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April, 2005
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March 30, 2005
Come and See. An increasing number of US and UK charities are organising donor field trips, which appeal to wealthy donors who want to see their cash in action rather than go to expensive fundraising diners. GHF featured in Third Sector article. (379k PDF)

Feb 11, 2005
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Jan/Feb 2005
Stone Temple Secrets. What happened in the underground labyrinth of ancient Peru? Archaeologist John Rick gets to the bottom of a 3,000-year-old mystery.

Oct 20 , 2004
From Ancient Ruins To Tourist Destinations

2005
Local man fights to protect cultural sites

"Saving Our Global Heritage" - the book
"Saving Our Global Heritage" - the book
 
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A Home for the Indus

THE DEPARTMENT OF ARCHAEOLOGY AND ANCIENT HISTORY AT THE M S UNIVERSITY, VADODARA IS BUSY PLANNING A NEW MUSEUM ON THE INDUS VALLEY AND LATE HARAPPAN CIVILISATION

Times of India
 
Above: Past perfect - Terracotta finds at Gola Dhoro
Above: Past perfect - Terracotta finds at Gola Dhoro

Kuldeep K. Bhan, head of the Department of Archaeology and Ancient history at the Maharaja Sayajirao University of Vadodara has reason to smile. Jeff Morgan, Executive Director, Global Heritage Fund (GHF) California. USA, has decided GHF shall seriously support the Indus Valley research, excavations and museums in Gujarat. Now the M S University is projerl partner with GHF with an ambitious Museum project already in the pipeline. The signifi­cance of the project cannot be under-mined. "Even after the Harappan era ended in what is present day Pakistan. the Harappan civilisation continued to live in Gujarat. for more than 600 years. So, to under-stand what led to the sudden end of the Indus Valley Civilisation, there is no place better than Gujarat.

Morgan was in Baruda in last November i.e work out the details and a state-of-the-art museum is scheduled to open within three years. The Department is in the process of acquiring land for the museum near the Laxmi Vilas Palace in Baroda, and this summer a team comprising the M S Varsity Chancellor Mrunalinidevi Puar, Vice Chancellor Manoj Soni and Kuldeep Bhan went to England and made presentations to prospective sponsors. especially from amongst the Gujarati community, to garner financial and academic support for the project. The project has Gujarat Chief Minister Narendra Modi's blessings and he is keen that Dholavira gets World Heritage Site status too.

The Harappan civilisation continued to exist in Gujarat for 600 years even after it disappeared from Pakistan
The Harappan civilisation continued to exist in Gujarat for 600 years even after it disappeared from Pakistan

The Department of Archaeology and Ancient History at the University has had a very distin­guished history. Nurtured with care [Or scholarship and academic excel­lence by archaeologists of the emi­nence of 13. Subbarao, KTM Hegde and R N Mehta, its current faculty comprising VH Sonawane. Kuldeep Bhan, Ajithprasad, Pratapchandran and others has kept its nag high and flying. The Department was the first to excavate and document Champaner Pavag- adh, the medieval Sultanate period capital of Gujarat, in the late 1960s. That is now a UNESCO World Heritage Site, the only one in Gujarat. It also worked at Devni Mori Sangharam, a stupa housing a Buddhist relic, in Sabarkantha district. north Gujarat.

Team at Gloa Dhoro excavation site
Team at Gloa Dhoro excavation site

Over the last three decades, however, the Department's focus of attention has been the more than 500 Indus Valley/late Harappan era sites doting the state, from the deserts of Kachchh to coastal Saurashtra, the flat, saline 1311x1 region, the inure than 120 sites in north Gujarat itself and scattered silos in the central-south industrial corridor. While the two most well-known sites are Lothal, near Ahmedabad, and Dhola Vira in Kachchh, the Department's exten­sive work al Gola Dhoro near Bagasra, Nageshwar near Dwarka, Jaidh near Jamnagar. Nagwada and so on. have led to a rich and rare haul of' late Harappan artifacts and an extensive understanding of Harappan city planning, building materials and lifestyle.

A special museum to house and display the "Technology or Crafts or Indus Valley - 2600 BC to 1900 BC" is the Department's current obses­sion. "Once the land is finalised, we will float a global tender for design and construction of the museum," says Bhan, adding that, "We would like the new museum to be built in a manner that resembles an ancient Harappan building." Technical information about construction methodologies, size of bricks, building style is available with the apartment where experts such as Ambika Patel and senior students are busy cataloguing, documenting and digitising their vast collection of Indus Valley objects.

The Gola Dhoro Site
The department discovered this site in 1996 and the tiny mound (1.92 ha) has yielded major surprises which include:

An unknown type of seal with a scooped out rectangular cavity and sliding cover.

Numerous 'unicorn' image seals popular in Harappan sites, indicating active trading.

Unique shell bangle workshop with thousands of unfinished shell circlets.

Stock piles of raw materials like variegated jasper and shell.

Evidence of faience-making, stone bead making activities.

It highlights the importance of smaller settlements supporting craft activities, trading and economic development.

In January this year, the Department was visited by Paul Jett, the Chief Conservator of the Smithsonian institute in the United States, who conducted a short, but detailed training programme in scientific object ­documentation for the start' and students. The Department has also joined with the WisconsinUniversity, USA, whose faculty member J. Mark Kenoyer has done extensive work on Harappan sites in Pakistan from 1995-2001 and who has offered his expertise at the Indian sites.

Although the Indus Civilisation is believed to be contemporaneous with Egyptian and Mesopotamian Civilisations and is considered of equal significance, the fact that the Indus Valley script continues to defy deciphers has been one of the major reasons why it has not been able to get its just due. Collecting information about the Indus Valley therefore continuous to he a laborious. time-consuming process, mired in hypothesis and conjecture.

An interesting, interactive and research-oriented Museum that looks holistically at a civilisation that spanned more than two millennia and was spread over 680,000 sq km could perhaps plug this lacuna. "While we do have a museum at Lothal, but that is a site-specific one," explains Bhan. "The new museum will be much wider in scope and scale. With our strength in research, the fact that we have the best collection of Harappan artifacts. and that so many of the sites are in Gujarat, Vadodara is the ideal place to situate such a museum."

Gujaratis, especially Vadodara­ites, could not agree more.

View of Indus Valley Museum at the Department of Archaeology & Ancient History, MS University
View of Indus Valley Museum at the Department of Archaeology & Ancient History, MS University

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