1989 in archaeology
The year 1989 in archaeology involved some significant events.
Excavations
- Excavations are made at the Temple of Poseidon by University of Chicago.
- Vimala Begley commences excavations at Arikamedu in Puducherry.
- Rescue excavation at Updown early medieval cemetery in Kent, England, led by Brian Philp, uncover 41 previously unexcavated graves.
- Monkey Marsh Lock, an 18th-century turf-sided lock on the Kennet and Avon Canal at Thatcham in southern England, is excavated and recorded prior to reconstruction.
Finds
- January - Skeleton of Buhl Woman found in Idaho.
- May - Wreck of discovered off Highwood, Illinois, by Harry Zych.
- June 8 - Wreck of German battleship Bismarck discovered in North Atlantic by Robert Ballard.
- Wreck of Roman grain-carrying ship Isis discovered off the coast of Sicily by Robert Ballard.
- Wreck of German Type UC II submarine SM UC-70 discovered off the North Yorkshire coast of England.
- Yoshinogari Ruins discovered at Kanzaki, Kyūshū, Japan; goods and building are mainly Yayoi period.
- Remains of The Rose and Globe Theatres discovered in London.
- Luxor statue cache in courtyard of Amenhotep III's colonnade of the Temple of Luxor, including a pink quartzite statue of the king on a sled wearing the Double Crown.
- Laguna Copperplate Inscription found in the Philippines.
- Oldest known wing bone of the great auk found at Eartham Pit, Boxgrove in England.
Publications
- Richard Hodges - The Anglo-Saxon Achievement: Archaeology & the Beginnings of English Society. Duckworth.
- Stuart Piggott - Ancient Britons and the Antiquarian Imagination: Ideas from the Renaissance to the Regency. Thames and Hudson..