Two detailed articles about the discovery will be published in the next issue of the Biblical Archeology Review.
Archeologists Are Frustrated Biblical Archeology Review is publishing several before-and-after pictures that it says illustrate "changes that have obliterated evidence critical to continuing scholarly efforts."
Biblical Archeology Review 2 (1996): 36-38.
"The team of editors has now become more an obstacle to publication than a source of information," the Biblical Archeology Review asserted in an article being published today.
Hershel Shanks, editor of the Biblical Archeology Review, complains in the journal's current issue that the team editing the scrolls "has now become more an obstacle to publication than a source of information."
Hershel Shanks, editor of Biblical Archeology Review, said the findings provided contemporaneous evidence supporting accounts of the Jewish monarchies in I Kings and II Chronicles.
Hershel Shanks, editor of Biblical Archeology Review and a prominent critic of the research monopoly, complains that the vital document has yet to be seen by outside scholars.
"Archeology is not out to prove the Bible," said Hershel Shanks, editor of Biblical Archeology Review.
I turned to Hershel Shanks, editor of the Biblical Archeology Review, who helped break the scholarly monopoly on the Dead Sea Scrolls.
Mr. Shanks is the editor of Biblical Archeology Review, a publication he started as a sort of hobby a quarter of a century ago that has grown to be the most influential of its kind in the world.