- Museums and Cultural Heritage
- Forensic and Genetic Research
- Forensic Anthropology and Bioarchaeology Studies
- Paleopathology and ancient diseases
- Archaeology and ancient environmental studies
- Anthropological Studies and Insights
- Politics and Society in Latin America
- Pacific and Southeast Asian Studies
- Cultural Heritage Materials Analysis
- Race, Genetics, and Society
- Memory, Trauma, and Commemoration
- Archaeological Research and Protection
- Maritime and Coastal Archaeology
- Digital and Traditional Archives Management
- Indigenous Cultures and History
- Yersinia bacterium, plague, ectoparasites research
- Conservation Techniques and Studies
- Cultural Heritage Management and Preservation
- Image Processing and 3D Reconstruction
University of Cambridge
2017-2025
ABSTRACT In the United Kingdom, study of archaeological cremated human remains has risen exponentially over past three decades. Consequently, we are gaining a more rounded understanding communities, rather than skewed perspective caused by an overreliance on studies from inhumation graves. Yet, ethical considerations related to excavation, recording, analysis, storage, and display not explicitly explored in literature. This paper redresses this imbalance explores key challenges based...
Abstract The Roman period saw the empire expand across Europe and Mediterranean, including much of what is today United Kingdom. While there written evidence high mobility into out Britain for administrators, traders military, impact imperialism on local population structure invisible in textual record. extent genetic change that occurred before Early Medieval Period how closely linked by kinship populations were, remains underexplored. Here, using genome-wide data from 52 ancient...
"The archaeology of human bones (3rd edition)." Archaeological Journal, ahead-of-print(ahead-of-print), pp. 1–2
The Roman period saw the empire expand across Europe and Mediterranean, including much of what is today Great Britain. While there written evidence high mobility into out Britain for administrators, traders, military, impact imperialism on local, rural population structure, kinship, invisible in textual record. extent genetic change that occurred during military occupation remains underexplored. Here, using genome-wide data from 52 ancient individuals eight sites Cambridgeshire covering...
Abstract