Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text

The text related to the cultural heritage 'Archaeological Site of Troy' has mentioned 'Archaeologists' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence Text Source
Subsequent excavations by following archaeologists elaborated on the number and dates of the cities.
Dissidents believing the Iliad, Odyssey, and other Greek texts recounting the Trojan War to be historical records were to become the first archaeologists at Troy.
Fortunately all excavation has been conducted under the management of key persons termed its "archaeologists."
The farm eventually became famous as a way station for archaeologists and the home of the Calvert collection of antiquities, which Frank kept locked in a hidden room.
Subsequent archaeologists at the site were to revise the date upward; nevertheless, the main identification of Troy as the city of the Iliad, and the scheme of the layers, have been kept.
These archaeologists, though following Schliemann's lead, added a professional approach not available to Schliemann.
Subsequent archaeologists turned the "cities" into layers (rightly or wrongly), named according to the new archaeological naming conventions then being developed.
Archaeologists following Schliemann picked up the trail of his researches adopting the same fundamental assumptions, culminating in the work and writings of Carl Blegen in the mid-20th century.
Archaeologists at the site before Korfmann had thought that Troy I began with the Bronze Age at 3000 BC.
Archaeologists have interpreted this as a reaction to external threats such as the Mycenaeans.
The archaeologists of Troy concerned themselves mainly with prehistory; however, not all the archaeology performed there falls into the category of prehistoric archaeology.
It was the question of their historicity that attracted the interest of such archaeologists as Calvert and Schliemann.
If Homeric Troy is not a fantasy woven in the 8th century by Greek oral poets passing on a tradition of innovating new poems at festivals, as most archaeologists hoped it was not, then the question must be asked, "what archaeological level represents Homeric Troy?"
It is a historic age with gaps in its history, which is how the archaeologists treat it.