Geoffrey Bibby

Through her he met the Danish professor Peter Vilhelm Glob and so acquired a position at the University of Aarhus in Denmark.

The team focused its excavations primarily below the Qal'at al-Bahrain, originally a large stratified tell on the northern shores of the country.

[3] The site covered around 50 hectares and was dated to the Early Dilmun period, which was the first quarter of the second millennium BC.

Archaeologists have also discovered a short length of the early Second-millennium city wall and the fragmented plans of six houses in the site.

[3] Bibby also wrote about stone and Bronze Age Europe, particularly the bog peoples of Denmark.

Geoffrey Bibby excavating the Bahrain Fort in the 1950s.