In CA 213, the Opinion article on Community Archaeology: Against the Odds outlined a problem of exclusion arising from the commercialisation and…
Archaeology is one of the Department for Continuing Education’s most comprehensively taught subjects, offering students the chance for progression from a single…
The dust has settled on our first big Current Archaeology event, and I am happy to report it was a great success.…
On February 14, I attended the Society of Antiquaries London and the Annual All-Party Parliamentary Archaeology Group Lecture to hear Hungarian archaeologist…
When Sir Neil Cossons retired as Chairman of English Heritage in June 2007, his farewell party was held in a building overlooking…
It is now just 3 short days until the Archaeology 2008 conference, which we are co-sponsoring along with the British Museum Department…
On January 28, I was fortunate to attend the London Society of Antiquaries Tercentenary lecture No. 3, The Dawn of Civilization, by…
No, not some new dieting fad – what beetles, lentils and anchovies have in common is their value as indicators of ancient climate…
Participants in a poll to name Scotland’s most treasured place put Victoria Colliery at the top of the poll. The mine, in…
A recent geophysical survey has revealed the plan of the Roman town at Caistor St Edmund in astonishing detail, including circular features…