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Air Photography, Past and Future Presidential Address for 1938

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 May 2014

O. G. S. Crawford
Affiliation:
Archaeology Officer, Ordnance Survey

Extract

An occasion such as this is an opportunity for looking both backwards and forwards. I propose first to speak about the activities of our Society during the past year, and then, looking forwards, to throw out a few suggestions. In the second part of my Address I shall not confine myself to the work of our society, but shall review the present position and future prospects of archaeological air-photography. To do so implies an optimistic outlook that I am very far from possessing. Let us leave it at that.

It is usual and proper for a President either to eulogize his predecessor or else to say that he is too distinguished to need any such eulogy. There is no harm in combining both methods. It is now generally recognized that Professor Mahr, working in happy and enviable co-operation with the Government of Eire, and also with his scientific colleagues in Northern Ireland, has built up a thoroughly sound administration and that he has even found time for personal research as well. His Presidential Address, delivered last year, which you will now have had time to read in the pages of our Proceedings, gives proof of that.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Prehistoric Society 1938

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References

page 237 note 1 See his book Recherches aériennes (Geuthner, Paris, 1934, 350 frs.)Google Scholar reviewed by Sir George Macdonald in an illustrated article in Antiquity, VIII, 1934, 373–80Google Scholar.

page 238 note 1 See Antiquity, in, 1929, 342–3, plates 4 and 5Google Scholar.

page 238 note 2 See ibid., x, 1936, 162–74.

page 238 note 3 Ibid., ix, 1935, 481–2.