James Denbow is Professor of Archaeology at the University of Texas, Austin. In the 1980s he was Senior Curator and Head of the Archaeology Department at the National Museum of Botswana, where he established and ran the Antiquities Program for the Government of Botswana. Between 1987 and 1993 he worked extensively in what is now the Republic of the Congo in Central Africa. His research has been funded by many agencies, including Fulbright, the National Science Foundation, the National Geographic Society, USAID, and the Swedish International Development Authority. He is the author of two books, Cultures and Customs of Botswana and Uncovering Botswana's Past, and has published more than 40 scientific articles in journals, including Science, Current Anthropology, the Journal of Archaeological Science, the Journal of African History, History in Africa, the Journal of American Folklore, the Journal of African Archaeology, the African Archaeological Review, the South African Journal of Science, the South African Archaeological Bulletin, and others. His current research focuses on processes of state formation centered around the prehistoric site of Bosutswe on the eastern fringe of the Kalahari Desert.
'... the almost total lack of prior archaeological work in the Tong hills, and the relative lack of such research across much of northern Ghana, makes this an important contribution to regional history ...' Peter Mitchell, Antiquity 'There is much to like about this book: it provides information on a little known area and a brief discussion of larger regional connections, and the personal narratives provide a good description of the processes of fieldwork in Congo, sometimes on a shoestring.' Scott MacEachern, Azania: Archaeological Research in Africa