Variation and change in stone tools in the highlands of Papua New Guinea: the witness of Wanelek
Description
Ralph Bulmer’s interest in archaeology began in childhood, largely due to his mother’s father, Harold Hughes, who was an architect and archaeologist. His work was to restore monuments such as Caernarfon Castle, and he published substantially on field archaeology. Family outings often took Ralph to his grandparents’ home in North Wales, and he grew up loving the many archaeological monuments of the countryside there. His mother was very enthusiastic about her father’s work and passed this on to her elder son. She knew the sites her father worked on well and enjoyed visits from archaeologists to the family home in Bangor; I remember her story of being terribly impressed, as a teenager, with the handsome young Mortimer Wheeler. ...