Among his excavations: the cemetery of Tell Abu Hawam (1952); Remnants of a church and a Byzantine settlement in Shavei Tzion (1955); Cemeteries at Tel Achziv (1958–1998) with the Istituto di Vicine Oriente in Rome, an excavation which Eilat Mazar continues to carry out. Tel Eli, a prehistoric site at the south end of the Sea of Galilee; Tel Kabri; A prehistoric site in Herzlia; A prehistoric site in Neve Yam with his colleague and friend Eliezer Wreschner; Evron quarry near Naharia, a site from the Early Paleolithic period with Prof. Avraham Ronen; Rosh Maya near Haifa and more.
Prausnitz worked as the editor of "Mitkufat ha-Even", scientific journal of the Israel Prehistoric Society.
He died in the summer of 1998 at the age of 75, and was buried in Givat Shaul cemetery in Jerusalem. He left a wife and three children. His bequest was transferred to the Antiquities Authority which promised to publish the hitherto inedited report on the Achziv excavations.
References
^Gopher, Avi; Sadeh, Shelley; Goren, Yuval (1992). "The Pottery Assemblage of Naḥal Beṣet I: A Neolithic Site in the Upper Galilee". Israel Exploration Journal. 42 (1/2): 4. JSTOR27926247.
Further reading
Miriam Tadmor, "Lezecher Ne'edarim: Moshe Prausnitz", Kadmoniut (Quarterly for Eretz Israel Antiquities and the Land of the Bible 32. 117 (1999), 56–60.
Ofer Bar Yosef and Yosef Garfinkel, The Prehistory of Eretz Israel: The culture of Man before the invention of writing, Jerusalem, Ariel ED. with the Museum of the Yarmoukian Culture in the name of Yehuda Roth, 2008, p. 330.
Moshe W. Prausnitz, 'From Hunter to Farmer and Trader', Jerusalem, 1970.
'Obituaries: Prausnitz, Moshe,' Israel Exploration Journal 49 (1999), 144.