Shimon Gibson

Shimon Gibson is a British-born archaeologist living in North Carolina, where he is a Professor of Practice in the Department of History at University of North Carolina at Charlotte.[1]

Life

Gibson obtained a PhD in landscape archaeology in the southern Levant from the Institute of Archaeology at University College London.[1]

Gibson was the lead archaeologist excavating a wilderness cave he associated with John the Baptist in 2000 and later wrote The Cave of John the Baptist.[2] He led a team that found a 10-line ritual cup at Mount Zion.[3][4]

He is the editor of The Illustrated Dictionary & Concordance of the Bible[5] and was co-editor with Avraham Negev of the Archaeological Encyclopedia of the Holy Land.[6] In his The Final Days of Jesus: The Archaeological Evidence (2009) he interpreted archaeological data sources to document the activities in the days leading to the crucifixion of Jesus.

Gibson has appeared in a number of biblical archaeology documentaries.[7]

gollark: Yes, the mandatory scene where they analogise it using a piece of paper or something.
gollark: For 4D *Euclidean* space the 2D/3D stuff mostly just generalizes fine, as far as I know.
gollark: There are theories of how they might work, but any useful ones involve ridiculously complex maths and not vague ideas of extra dimensions.
gollark: Also, I don't think that "the universe is the 3-dimensional surface of a 4-sphere" thing is actually... true?
gollark: You can totally understand it ish, just not very intuitively.

References



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