M. Wiener's key-lecture entitled "Times change: The current state of the
Debate in Old World Chronology" provides the volume's introduction,
followed by the section "Science and Chronology", which includes, among
others, several controversial studies on the results of carbon-14
dating. An important point for the ongoing discussion on Aegean
chronology is made by Pearce et al., who demonstrate that certain traces
in Greenland ice-core layers, previously taken to be stemming from the
Minoan eruption of Thera, in fact originate from eruptions of the
Aniakchak volcano in Alaska. The volume next includes articles that deal
with historical chronology and archaeological evidence, arranged in the
sections "Egypt", "The Levant and Syria" and "The Aegean, Cyprus and
adjacent regions". In addition to reports and analyses dealing with many
aspects of the chronology and archaeology of these regions, this part
also contains M. Bietak's study on all wall-paintings from Egypt,
Israel, Syria and the Levant considered to be Minoan.