Roger Summers (1907-2003) was a Zimbabweanarchaeologist, who worked for the National Museums and Monuments Commission from 1947 - 1970 and was described as "a major influence in the formative years of Zimbabwean, then. Rhodesian, archaeology".[1] He came into conflict with the Rhodesian government due to his refusal to deny the African origins of Great Zimbabwe.[2] He worked extensively on Great Zimbabwe,[3]Nyanga[4][5] and more generally on the Iron Age in Zimbabwe[6]
and on ancient mining in Zimbabwe[7]
^Summers, Roger (1970). "The Rhodesian Iron Age". In J.D. Fage; Roland Oliver (eds.). Papers in African Prehistory. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN978-0-521-09566-2.
^Summers, Roger (1952). "Inyanga: a preliminary report". Antiquity.
^Summers, Roger (1958). Inyanga: prehistoric settlements in Southern Rhodesia. University Press. p. 335.
^Summers, Roger (1966). "The Iron Age of Southern Rhodesia". Current Anthropology. 7: 463–484. doi:10.1086/200753.
^Summers, Roger (1969). "Ancient Mining in Rhodesia". Museum Memoir. 3. Mardon Printers: 236.