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Department of Archaeology

 
  • Displaying 120 projects
Read more at: "Small performances": investigating the typographic punches of John Baskerville (1707-75) through heritage science and practice-based research

"Small performances": investigating the typographic punches of John Baskerville (1707-75) through heritage science and practice-based research

At the intersection among the arts, science, and technology, printing is widely recognised as the invention of the millennium. However, and in spite of a resurgence of traditional typographic methods among artists and craftspeople, letterpress equipment and technology face an uncertain future.


Read more at: A reassessment of Neanderthal mortuary behaviour at Shanidar Cave, Iraqi Kurdistan

A reassessment of Neanderthal mortuary behaviour at Shanidar Cave, Iraqi Kurdistan

The ways Neanderthals treated their dead have been a key focus of long-standing debates about their capacities for compassion and symbolic thought, and their similarity to modern humans. These questions feed into broader questions concerning how similar Neanderthals were to ourselves, modern humans, especially in light of evidence that we interbred.


Read more at: Adaptation and Resilience to Climate Change (ARCC)

Adaptation and Resilience to Climate Change (ARCC)

Image: Pastoralist rock art, Serengeti, Tanzania. Photo: P. Lane.


Read more at: After The Plague

After The Plague

A multi-disciplinary research project focusing on St. John's Hospital cemetery, Cambridge, with an aim to learn more about the lives of the medieval urban poor during the bubonic plague epidemic known as the Black Death.


Read more at: Amarna: Egyptian Archaeological Heritage

Amarna: Egyptian Archaeological Heritage

Focusing on cultural heritage, the project is exploring awareness of the archaeology of the ancient Egyptian city of Tell el-Amarna alongside local relationships with the site.


Read more at: ANCESTORS: Making Ancestors: the politics of death in prehistoric Europe

ANCESTORS: Making Ancestors: the politics of death in prehistoric Europe

The above photo shows: A left lateral aspect of a cranium from Catignano (a Middle Neolithic village in Abruzzo), showing two healing trepanations on the left parietal bone and healed fracture on the left frontal and parietal bones of a 40-50 year old female

 


Read more at: Anthropogenic Wetlands and the Long Transition to Agriculture in the Levant (Anthropogenic Wetlands)

Anthropogenic Wetlands and the Long Transition to Agriculture in the Levant (Anthropogenic Wetlands)

The project will develop an innovative new model to examine the pivotal role of anthropogenic wetlands in the long transition to agriculture in the Levant. Remarkably, while this transition has been explored in some detail, we still do not have a good grasp on the long-term developments and causes of the origins of agriculture, mainly due to a lack of direct botanical evidence.


Read more at: Archaeological science and globalisation: Great Zimbabwe

Archaeological science and globalisation: Great Zimbabwe

This project aims to study the crucibles and finished metal objects recently recovered from the Great Zimbabwe World Heritage site, using techniques from earth and materials sciences.


Read more at: Archaeological Science and Technology in Africa Initiative (ASTA)

Archaeological Science and Technology in Africa Initiative (ASTA)

The archaeology of Sub-Saharan Africa is rapidly gaining momentum, thanks to renewed efforts to decolonise and empower indigenous narratives of agency and creativity that have been bolstered further by the increasing application of scientific methods. However, important challenges remain. One is the scarcity of training and archaeological science capacity in sub-Saharan Africa, which is necessary to make these efforts sustainable.


Read more at: Archaeometallurgy in China: diversifying the model

Archaeometallurgy in China: diversifying the model

Archaeometallurgical contributions to various research areas such as the provenance of Shang bronzes, ingenious adaptations of metallurgical technologies to different ecological and socioeconomic constraints, and regional developments of metallurgical traditions.


Read more at: Archaeometallurgy in the Americas

Archaeometallurgy in the Americas

The metalwork of Pre-Columbian America has long fascinated scholars and the public alike. In addition to the sheer allure of gold, this attraction is exacerbated by the extraordinary technical skill that underpins many of these artefacts, as well as their mesmerising iconography, which evokes a rich symbolic world and an appreciation of metals that goes beyond their material worth. Most of these objects were made for ritual use.


Read more at: ArchBiMod – Agent-Based Modelling to assess the quality and bias of the archaeological record

ArchBiMod – Agent-Based Modelling to assess the quality and bias of the archaeological record

Archaeological data is often biased and incomplete. This is a well-known issue for most archaeologists. Although studies of specific sites and small regions can have this into account, the effect of this problem increases exponentially as archaeologists expand their chronological and geographic frame, and try to answer questions related to general dynamics and broad human processes.


Read more at: ATLANTAXES: Mass production and deposition of leaded bronzes in Atlantic Europe during the Late Bronze Age - Iron Age transition

ATLANTAXES: Mass production and deposition of leaded bronzes in Atlantic Europe during the Late Bronze Age - Iron Age transition

Analysis and evaluation of bronze axe hoards during the Late Bronze Age - Iron Age transition. The project investigates provenance, chronology, technological and cultural aspects of bronze deposition of the European Atlantic region.


Read more at: Attention Profiles in Hunter-Gatherer societies

Attention Profiles in Hunter-Gatherer societies

Understanding the diversity of human cognitive traits in different cultural contexts and in an evolutionary framework is crucial for advancing actual human mind but also its disorders. Attention and executive control including traits such as inhibition, impulsivity, and hyperactivity, are studied in WEIRD (Western, Educated, Industrialised, Rich, and Democratic) societies, where sustained focus and impulse control are highly valued. A deficit in these domains might lead to a diagnosis of a mental disorder such as ADHD (Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder).


Read more at: B-CARED

B-CARED

The bioarchaeological characterization of disabled individuals from the past is particularly challenging because it pushes the boundaries of the interpretation of pathologies recognisable on human remains. With my project, namely B-CARED, I will investigate the bioarchaeological approaches for recreating “Past to life”. In so doing, the osteobiographical approach offers a possible framework, in which human remains are used to understand not only the embodied experience during life but also seeing people as playing diverse social roles (e.g.


Read more at: Beasts to Craft: Biocodicology as a new approach to the study of parchment manuscripts

Beasts to Craft: Biocodicology as a new approach to the study of parchment manuscripts

The aim of the ERC project Beasts to Craft (B2C) is to document the biological and craft records in parchment in order to reveal the entangled histories of improvement and parchment production in Europe from 500-1900 AD.


Read more at: Between the Local and the Global: A Multi-scalar Comparative Analysis of Urbanisation in Iron Age Greece, Etruria and Sicily

Between the Local and the Global: A Multi-scalar Comparative Analysis of Urbanisation in Iron Age Greece, Etruria and Sicily

The 10th-5th centuries BCE (the first centuries of the Iron Age) witnessed significant societal transformations across the Mediterranean. Populations grew in many regions, the first genuine economic integration of the basin occurred through maritime interaction and overseas settlement, and, for the first time, communities characterisable as urban and state-like are identifiable from the sea’s eastern littoral (where they had a deeper Bronze Age history) through to its Atlantic border.


Read more at: Bodies Matter: A Comparative Approach to Colonial Borderlands

Bodies Matter: A Comparative Approach to Colonial Borderlands

‘BODIES MATTER’ focuses on the material culture of bodies (and the self) in colonial borderlands by comparing three frontiers at various periods and geographies: the Spanish Empire’s southern borderland in the Americas in the AD 16th-19th century, the Punic western Mediterranean in the 6th-2nd century BC, and the Islamic-Christian Ethiopian frontier between the AD 10th and 15th century.


Read more at: Bova Marina Archaeological Project - Progetto Archeologico Bova Marina

Bova Marina Archaeological Project - Progetto Archeologico Bova Marina

Excavation and survey in southern Aspromonte.


Read more at: Buckbee Project

Buckbee Project

A multidisciplinary project investigating the interrelations between crop plants, insect pollinators, and human management in prehistory.


Read more at: Cape Verde

Cape Verde

The Archaeology of Cape Verde

At the invitation of a local university and the island's Ministry of Culture's IPC, the CHRC  - Chris Evans & Marie Louise Stig Sørensen - have been investigating its early Portuguese town of Cidade Velha since 2006. Founded in the middle decades of the 15th century, and then for some three centuries the Islands' capital, it became a major hub of the Atlantic Slave Trade, with thousands of Africans transhipped each year to the Americas.


Read more at: Capital economies in ancient Mesopotamia: reconstructing palatial cuisines and agricultural systems at Carchemish, Niniveh, and Dur Kurigalzu

Capital economies in ancient Mesopotamia: reconstructing palatial cuisines and agricultural systems at Carchemish, Niniveh, and Dur Kurigalzu

The Late Bronze Age (LBA) and Early Iron Age (EIA) in southwest Asia saw major socio-political transformations, including the rise and fall of the Hittite, Kassite and Neo-Assyrian empires. Alongside socio-political and economic instability, climatically induced droughts are among the most frequently cited causes for the collapse of these states. However, direct evidence for the impact of droughts on agricultural systems is virtually absent from these periods, rendering hypotheses that see climate change at the heart of the crises hypothetical.


Read more at: Community Heritage and Education for Sustainable Development in Tanzania

Community Heritage and Education for Sustainable Development in Tanzania

The Community Heritage and Education for Sustainable Development in Tanzania project is a continuation of some of the activities initiated by the AHRC-funded Co-production Networks for Community Heritage in Tanzania (CONCH) project (https://www.conchproject.org/), that ran in 2018 and 2019. This aimed to identify how heritage protection, conservation and interpretation contribute to sustainable development.


Read more at: CONCH Project

CONCH Project

Co-production Networks for Community Heritage in Tanzania.


Read more at: Confinement and Conflict

Confinement and Conflict

This project, funded by the McDonald Institute and the Society of Antiquaries, aims to survey of a WWI POW camp in Jersey in collaboration with the University of Liverpool and Bristol.


Read more at: CRIC - Cultural Heritage and the Re-construction of Identities after Conflict

CRIC - Cultural Heritage and the Re-construction of Identities after Conflict

Introduction to the CRIC Project.


Read more at: Crop Production in the Levant and International Trade Exchange: investigating coprolites and crop plant remains from the 1st millennium CE Negev Highlands and Aravah Valley CroProLITE

Crop Production in the Levant and International Trade Exchange: investigating coprolites and crop plant remains from the 1st millennium CE Negev Highlands and Aravah Valley CroProLITE

This research employs archaeobotanical and biomolecular methods to reconstruct ancient agropastoral change over the first millennium CE in two microregions, the Aravah valley along the southern border of modern Israel-Jordan and the adjacent Negev Highlands. The region witnessed unprecedented agricultural developments during this period, alongside major socio-political, climatic, and environmental changes – including climate change and plague. Rich and well-preserved organic remains from rubbish dumps at nine archaeological sites will provide the basis for this study.


Read more at: Documenting Knowledge, Skills, and Practices of Dry-Stone Masonry at Great Zimbabwe

Documenting Knowledge, Skills, and Practices of Dry-Stone Masonry at Great Zimbabwe

This project is documenting the knowledge, skills, and practices of traditional dry-stone masonry at Great Zimbabwe, southern Zimbabwe. Once the capital of an Iron Age empire, Great Zimbabwe is an ancient settlement complex with dry-stone structures covering over 720 hectares. Around it, local communities live and maintain ancestral connections to the site. The most outstanding material remains are stone structures, built without use of mortar or any binding material.


Read more at: EHSCAN-Exploring Early Holocene Saharan Cultural Adaptation and Social Networks through socio-ecological inferential modelling

EHSCAN-Exploring Early Holocene Saharan Cultural Adaptation and Social Networks through socio-ecological inferential modelling

EHSCAN is a Horizon-MSCA-2022-PF scheme Fellowship Funded by UKRI and hosted by the McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research, University of Cambridge. 


Read more at: ENCOUNTER

ENCOUNTER

ENCOUNTER investigates the Jomon-Yayoi transition, a demic and cultural diffusion event that led the predominantly hunting, gathering, and fishing-based communities of the Japanese islands to adopt rice and millet farming during the 1st millennium BC.


Read more at: EndoMap - Mapping the brain of our ancestors

EndoMap - Mapping the brain of our ancestors

Tracking the early emergence of derived Homo-like cerebral features in the hominin fossil record can be expected to contribute to an understanding of the timing (i.e., chronology) and mode (i.e., process) of critical brain changes. Because brain tissue is not preserved in the fossil record, studies of hominin brain evolution focus on brain endocasts (i.e., replicas of the inner table of the bony braincase).


Read more at: Enhancing Fenland Farming: Applying Insights from Archaeology

Enhancing Fenland Farming: Applying Insights from Archaeology

The project will research how archaeological and palaeoecological narratives of past land management and climate change adaptation can shape sustainable farming, regenerative agriculture, and rewilding strategies in the Cambridgeshire Fenlands. The nationally important agricultural area is extremely vulnerable to climate change, and the mentioned strategies are considered key mitigation options.


Read more at: ENTANGLED: Entangled materialities and new global histories from southern Africa

ENTANGLED: Entangled materialities and new global histories from southern Africa

Research into global connections, which formed the basis for the spread of objects, ideas, innovations, religions and empires, continues to fundamentally shape our understanding of the development of contemporary society. While the historiography of global connections is dominated by a European perspective, new research into overlooked vantage points combined with innovative methodological and theoretical approaches provide important opportunities to challenge and enrich perspectives of global history. 


Read more at: Evolution on an island continent: feeding ecology of Pleistocene sloths

Evolution on an island continent: feeding ecology of Pleistocene sloths

Now represented by only two living genera restricted to tropical forests, sloths once were a dominant group within South American ecosystems until as recently as 10 ka, right before the last ice age extinction. Fossil sloths are considered plant eaters, like their modern relatives, but their extremely high diversity suggests that these were ecologically more versatile than traditionally thought.


Read more at: Evolutionary Psychiatry and Stigmatisation

Evolutionary Psychiatry and Stigmatisation

Evolutionary psychiatry explores why humans are vulnerable to common, heritable mental disorders without clear pathology, considering factors like environmental impacts and misinterpreted adaptations. While it offers explanations, it doesn't provide evidence for reducing harm or developing new treatments.


Read more at: Exchange Networks in the Arabian Gulf in the Bronze Age (ENGulf)

Exchange Networks in the Arabian Gulf in the Bronze Age (ENGulf)

During the Early and Middle Bronze Age (2500-1600 B.C), a range of exchange networks linked Arabia, Iraq, Iran, Bahrain and South Asia, facilitating the long-distance movement of a wide variety of raw materials and finished products. Texts from the Sargonic and Ur III period (2300-2000 BC) provide us with lists of commodities entering Mesopotamia from toponyms referred to as ‘Dilmun’ (Bahrain), ‘Magan’ (south-eastern Arabia and southern Iran), and ‘Meluhha’ (the Indus Civilisation), which include copper, tin, semi-precious stones, as well as organic products.


Read more at: Experiencing monuments. Visualization of Western European prehistoric megalithic structures

Experiencing monuments. Visualization of Western European prehistoric megalithic structures

In Western Europe the main use for artificial monuments out of stone, wood or earthy materials extends from the Late Neolithic to Early Bronze Age (4th and 3rd millennium BCE).  This unique period of landscape adaptation has a lasting, visible imprint on the present. However, as monuments are by definition visual landmarks, there is currently a lack of research regarding the perceptive clues offered by these structures to the people who built and frequented them.


Read more at: Exploring locomotor and biomechanical diversity in the hominin fossil record based on long bone external morphology

Exploring locomotor and biomechanical diversity in the hominin fossil record based on long bone external morphology

Our knowledge of human evolution is limited by several factors. One is tightly linked to the nature of the fossil record, as bones of our extinct human relatives and other primate species rarely appear in archaeological and paleontological sites, and when they do, they very commonly appear in an isolated fashion and/or are highly fragmented. These factors more severely affect studies of limb bones, which have been vaguely analysed or even ignored in certain cases.


Read more at: FENSCAPES: Archaeology, Natural Heritage and Environmental Change

FENSCAPES: Archaeology, Natural Heritage and Environmental Change

This archaeology-led initiative focuses on the East Anglian Fens, an extraordinary landscape where exceptional preservation of organic artefacts and environmental evidence gives unparalleled insights into the last 5,000 years of communities, resources and habitats.


Read more at: FRAGSUS: Fragility and Sustainability in the restricted island environments of Malta

FRAGSUS: Fragility and Sustainability in the restricted island environments of Malta

Study of the sustainability and subsequent radical change amongst the Maltese Temple Building populations of prehistoric Malta in the 4th and 3rd millennia BC.


Read more at: Frontiers of Etruria

Frontiers of Etruria

Studying the diversity of political frontiers in Etruria.


Read more at: Gernika as Orient: Bombs, Art & Fake News

Gernika as Orient: Bombs, Art & Fake News

This project takes as its focus the 1937 aerial bombardment of Gernika as a political and artistic event rooted in—and in ongoing dialogue with—colonial violence in the Middle East & North Africa. It connects the 1920s aerial bombardment of civilians in colonial Iraq, Syria, Afghanistan, and Morocco to the fascist assault on Gernika during the Spanish Civil War.


Read more at: Globalization, Citizens, and Society in Antiquity: A Comparative Study of Egypt and Ugarit

Globalization, Citizens, and Society in Antiquity: A Comparative Study of Egypt and Ugarit

My project for the McDonald Institute investigates the interplay of institutional authorities, private citizens, localities, and global networks in the Late Bronze Age (ca. 16th-12th centuries BC), the first phase of globalization in world history. Globalization is not only an issue of connectivities and networks, but it also depends on the agency of individuals and social groups at the local level that generate alternative configurations of power, either in concert or in contrast with governments and institutional authorities.


Read more at: Heristem: STEM in Heritage Sciences

Heristem: STEM in Heritage Sciences

The last decades have witnessed marked achievements of STEM in understanding the remains of humans, animals, and plants from the past by analyzing different materials, both inorganic and organic. These developments have opened-up the great potential for increasing our understanding of cultural heritage, and hence for developing better strategies for its protection and management.


Read more at: Historical East African Archaeology and Theory (HEAAT)

Historical East African Archaeology and Theory (HEAAT)

HEAAT aims to develop a multidisciplinary, theory-focused and data-driven research framework and agenda for East African historical archaeology that will privilege the research of the internal dynamics of African communities and account for the region’s history of complex identities. By investigating a 200-year, high-resolution record of material culture and identity change among the Ilchamus community in Kenya, from c.


Read more at: How old are the trade routes in Central Africa? Developing a history of the exchange networks through the cases of Copperbelt and Niari Basin copper deposits

How old are the trade routes in Central Africa? Developing a history of the exchange networks through the cases of Copperbelt and Niari Basin copper deposits

Long-distance exchange networks played key roles in the socio-political history of Central Africa before the 20th century, but they are poorly known prior to the 19th century owing to a scarcity of written sources covering the earlier centuries. Archaeological data, however, suggest that major 19th-century trade routes were well established several centuries before.


Read more at: How to build a hominin: predictive simulations of locomotion in human evolution

How to build a hominin: predictive simulations of locomotion in human evolution

How did our ancestors walk? Perhaps the greatest challenge that this question has posed in the past, is the lack of methodological applications in which no study has previously reconstructed how our ancestors moved using biomechanical modelling techniques. We need to consider not just individual bones when reconstructing movement, but to look at the full body to begin to tell the story of our ancestors’ movement. Muscles animate our body, permitting us to walk, run and even dance. We must reconstruct the muscles of the body to understand ancestral locomotion.


Read more at: IBERIRON: The Rise of Iron Technology in pre-Roman Iberia

IBERIRON: The Rise of Iron Technology in pre-Roman Iberia

A large-scale multi-disciplinary study of pre-Roman iron technology in the Iberian Peninsula.


Read more at: iMapNut: Machine Learning to Map and Address Causal Factors of Child Malnutrition in Low- and- Middle- Income Countries

iMapNut: Machine Learning to Map and Address Causal Factors of Child Malnutrition in Low- and- Middle- Income Countries

This project aims to improve the poor integration of localized data linking various WASH dimensions (infrastructure, access, practices) and children nutritional status at the population level as well as the poor involvement of policy makers concerned with WASH in local and country level nutritional programs. Our network aims include:
1.

Read more at: In Africa: The role of East Africa in the evolution of human diversity

In Africa: The role of East Africa in the evolution of human diversity

In Africa is a five-year research programme to investigate the origins of our species - Homo sapiens - and its diversity in Africa, and aims at making new discoveries of early human fossils, archaeological sites and their environmental context.