skip to content

Department of Archaeology

 

Displaying 12 projects

Excavation and survey in southern Aspromonte.
Excavation in the cemetery area of the ancient Latin town of Crustumerium, Rome.
Investigating residential mobility in the eastern Mediterranean using isotope GeoChemistry’ (EPOCH GeoChem).
Study of the sustainability and subsequent radical change amongst the Maltese Temple Building populations of prehistoric Malta in the 4th and 3rd millennia BC.
The analysis of a fuzzy frontier between the Etruscans and the Umbrians.
The PROCON project explores the role of textile production and consumption in the formation of early states, using the example of Mediterranean Europe during 1000-500 BCE.
The aim of this project is to better understand the health consequences of parasitism in the Roman world. The Romans were responsible for introducing sanitation and hygiene infrastructure to those parts their empire where it did not exist before. Communal latrines for town inhabitants, individual...
Despite a long history of intensive landscape-oriented archaeological research in the Aegean, most primary fieldwork has been concentrated in mainland Greece and a few Aegean islands. By contrast, the eastern side of the Aegean has received far less attention, with local methods and research...
Changing Paleoenvironments and Hunter-Gatherer Strategies in the Northern Adriatic Basin.
Cambridge is home to world-leading researchers across archaeological science, technical art history and heritage science, based at Department of Archaeology, the Fitzwilliam Museum, and the Hamilton Kerr Institute, among others. There are multiple synergies across these institutions in terms of...
Investigating unsolved problems of the fourth and third millennium BC in Malta.
Collapse and transformation in the Mediterranean 1200-500 BC.