The above markup comes from the article on the Negev in the Lexham Bible Dictionary. The underlined references should link to pages located in Archaeology of the Land of the Bible by Amihai Mazar.
This Mazar link in the same article is also broken it appears.
Yes these are all broken
Beloved Amodeo and
Actually, it is more likely that there is no link as there is no blue text. A link cannot be broken if it doesn't exist. The order in which resources were produced frequently explains missing linkage.
Beloved Amodeo and Yes these are all broken Actually, it is more likely that there is no link as there is no blue text. A link cannot be broken if it doesn't exist. The order in which resources were produced frequently explains missing linkage.
Archaeology
The biblical Negev is home to many archaeological sites and finds that provide insight into the written records of the ancient Near East. Yohanan Aharoni and his archaeological team are responsible for much of what is known about the remains in the Negev. Settlement in the biblical Negev began during the Chalcolithic Period (fourth millennium bc), and then declined through the Early, Middle, and Late Bronze Ages (third and second millenniums bc). Exceptions to this decline include Arad at the beginning of the Bronze Age and Tel Masos at the end. The subsequent Iron Age saw the most development in the Negev, as the kings of both the united and divided monarchies expanded south to strengthen their borders (Mazar, Archaeology, 438, 61, 95, 153, 177, 309, 370).
Ridley, B. (2016). Negev. In J. D. Barry, D. Bomar, D. R. Brown, R. Klippenstein, D. Mangum, C. Sinclair Wolcott, L. Wentz, E. Ritzema, & W. Widder (Eds.), The Lexham Bible Dictionary. Lexham Press.
Eureka! Note the difference in title. It probably affected the match routine adding the link assuming they refer to the same edition of the same work.