Strontium isotopic analysis
(2019)
Book Chapter
Montgomery, J., Evans, J., & Towers, J. (2019). Strontium isotopic analysis. In M. Parker Pearson, A. Chamberlain, M. Jay, M. Richards, J. Evans, & A. Sheridan (Eds.), The Beaker People: Isotopes, Mobility and Diet in Prehistoric Britain (371-408). Oxbow Books
All Outputs (46)
Lithics (2019)
Book Chapter
Foulds, F. (2019). Lithics. In M. Holst, & G. Speed (Eds.), Death, Burial and Identity : 3000 years of death in the Vale of Mowbray (558-559). Northern Archaeological Associates. https://doi.org/10.5284/1050910
A Comparative Petrographic Analysis of Middle Bronze Age Ridged-Neck Pithoi from Tell el-Burak and Ashkelon. (2019)
Book Chapter
Badreshany, K. (2019). A Comparative Petrographic Analysis of Middle Bronze Age Ridged-Neck Pithoi from Tell el-Burak and Ashkelon. In J. Kamlah, & H. Sader (Eds.), Tell El-Burak 1: The Middle Bronze Age: With Chapters Related to the Site and to the Late Medieval Period. (45). Harrassowitz
Activating the Achaemenid Landscape. The Broken Lion Tomb (Yılan Taş) and the Phrygian Highlands in the Achaemenid Period (2019)
Book Chapter
Draycott, C. M. (2019). Activating the Achaemenid Landscape. The Broken Lion Tomb (Yılan Taş) and the Phrygian Highlands in the Achaemenid Period. In G. R. Tsetskhladze (Ed.), Phrygia in antiquity : from the Bronze Age to the Byzantine period (189-220). Peeters PressIn its day the collapsed, massive rock-cut tomb known as the Broken Lion Tomb, or Yılan Taş, located in the Köhnüş Valley north of Afyon, would have been one of the most impressive tomb monuments in Asia Minor. Now lying in a pile of confused blocks... Read More about Activating the Achaemenid Landscape. The Broken Lion Tomb (Yılan Taş) and the Phrygian Highlands in the Achaemenid Period.
The Middle Bronze Age Remains in Area II (2019)
Book Chapter
Badreshany, K., & Schmitt, A. (2019). The Middle Bronze Age Remains in Area II. In J. Kamlah, & H. Sader (Eds.), Tell el-Burak I. The Middle Bronze Age With Chapters Related to the Site and to the Mamluk-Ottoman Periods. (1). Harrassowitz
From corpse to symbol. Proposed cognitive grades over the long-term evolution of hominin mortuary activity. (2019)
Book Chapter
Pettitt, P. (2019). From corpse to symbol. Proposed cognitive grades over the long-term evolution of hominin mortuary activity. In T. Henley, M. Rossano, & E. Kardas (Eds.), Handbook of Cognitive Archaeology. Psychology in Prehistory (512-25.). Routledge
The Ethics of Sampling Human Skeletal Remains for Destructive Analyses: A UK Perspective (2019)
Book Chapter
UK Perspective. In K. Squires, D. Errickson, & N. Márquez-Grant (Eds.), A Global Challenge in Bioarchaeology and Forensic Anthropology (265-297). Springer Verlag
Caves as Vibrant Places: A Theoretical Manifesto (2019)
Book Chapter
Prijatelj, A., & Skeates, R. (2019). Caves as Vibrant Places: A Theoretical Manifesto. In Between Worlds. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-99022-4_2
Scientific Analyses (2019)
Book Chapter
Moore, J., Hamilton, D., & Speed, G. (2019). Scientific Analyses. In G. Speed, & M. Holst (Eds.), Death, Burial and Identity: 3000 years of death in the Vale of Mowbray (579 - 599). Northern Archaeology Associates
Interpreting GPR data from Jaffna Fort, Northern Sri Lanka, using historic maps and new excavations (2019)
Book Chapter
Schmidt, A., Gunawardhana, P., Davis, C., Hale, D., Coningham, R., Pushparatnam, P., …Manuel, M. (2019). Interpreting GPR data from Jaffna Fort, Northern Sri Lanka, using historic maps and new excavations. In J. Bonsall (Ed.), New Global Perspectives on Archaeological Prospection:13th International Conference on Archaeological Prospection 28 August - 1 September 2019 Sligo Ireland (224-227). Archaeopress. https://doi.org/10.32028/9781789693072
Chapter 3 Archaeological and Topographic Survey at Kom al-Ahmer and Kom Wasit (2019)
Book Chapter
Hinojosa Baliño, I. (2019). Chapter 3 Archaeological and Topographic Survey at Kom al-Ahmer and Kom Wasit. In M. Kenawi (Ed.), Kom al-Ahmer – Kom Wasit I: Excavations in the Metelite Nome, Egypt: ca. 700 BC – AD 1000 (41-55). Archaeopress. https://doi.org/10.2307/j.ctvwh8c5j.11
Experimental magnetic susceptibility signatures for identifying hearths in the Mesolithic period in North East England, UK. (2019)
Book Chapter
Snape, L., & Church, M. (2019). Experimental magnetic susceptibility signatures for identifying hearths in the Mesolithic period in North East England, UK. In J. Walker, & D. Klinnick (Eds.), Wild Things 2.0: Further Advances in Palaeolithic and Mesolithic Research (55-80). Oxbow
Walking in someone else’s shoes: archaeology, empathy and fiction (2019)
Book Chapter
Van Helden, D., & Witcher, R. (2020). Walking in someone else’s shoes: archaeology, empathy and fiction. In D. Van Helden, & R. Witcher (Eds.), Researching the archaeological past through imagined narratives: a necessary fiction. Routledge
Communities, Identities, Conflict and Appropriation in South Asia (2019)
Book Chapter
Coningham, R., & Lewer, N. (2019). Communities, Identities, Conflict and Appropriation in South Asia. In R. Coningham, & N. Lewer (Eds.), Archaeology, Cultural Heritage Protection and Community Engagement in South Asia (151-164). Palgrave Macmillan. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-981-13-6237-8_11
Isotopes and chariots: diet, subsistence and origins of Iron Age people from Yorkshire (2019)
Book Chapter
Jay, M., & Montgomery, J. (2019). Isotopes and chariots: diet, subsistence and origins of Iron Age people from Yorkshire. In P. Halkon (Ed.), The Arras culture of Eastern Yorkshire - celebrating the Iron Age. Oxbow Books
Historical fiction and archaeological interpretation: introduction (2019)
Book Chapter
Van Helden, D., & Witcher, R. (2020). Historical fiction and archaeological interpretation: introduction. In D. Van Helden, & R. Witcher (Eds.), Researching the archaeological past through imagined narratives: a necessary fiction. Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9780203730904-1The transformation of the material traces of the past into archaeological narrative is a fundamentally creative act. But what happens when archaeologists engage with the work and methods of historical novelists and filmmakers? Do they risk transgress... Read More about Historical fiction and archaeological interpretation: introduction.
Concluding Thoughts. Small Beginnings, Significant Outcomes (2019)
Book Chapter
Halcrow, S., & Gowland, R. (2019). Concluding Thoughts. Small Beginnings, Significant Outcomes. In R. Gowland, & S. Halcrow (Eds.), The Mother-Infant Nexus in Anthropology. Small Beginnings, Significant Outcomes (275-277). Springer Verlag
What Doesn't Kill you: Early Life Health and Nutrition in Anglo-Saxon East Anglia (2019)
Book Chapter
Kendall, E. J., Millard, A., Beaumont, J., Gowland, R., Gorton, M., & Gledhill, A. (2019). What Doesn't Kill you: Early Life Health and Nutrition in Anglo-Saxon East Anglia. In R. Gowland, & S. Halcrow (Eds.), The Mother-Infant Nexus in Anthropology and Archaeology. Small Beginnings, Significant Outcomes (103-124). Springer Verlag
The Iron Age I in the Levant: Prologue (2019)
Book Chapter
Welton, L., & Charaf, H. (2019). The Iron Age I in the Levant: Prologue. In H. Charaf, & L. Welton (Eds.), The Iron Age I in the Levant : a view from the North (Part 1) (2-7). Lebanese British Friends of the National Museum
Buckle Up! Buckle Use in Burials and Shifting Gender Relations in Seventh-Century England – A Contextual Analysis. (2019)
Book Chapter
McNeil, N. (2019). A Contextual Analysis. In H. Christie, & M. Kasten (Eds.), Current Approaches to People, Places and Things in the Early Medieval Period (3-18). BAR