Latest issue of Archaeology International (2019) available online
20 March 2020
The latest issue of Archaeology International, showcasing the diverse research, teaching and public engagement activities at the UCL Institute of Archaeology, is available online.
Archaeology International Issue 22 (2019) highlights the Institute's research presence across the globe and contains a number of articles by Institute members including:
- Recurring Dreams: Mega Events and Traces of Past Futures by Jonathan Gardner
- Designing 'Critical' Heritage Experiences: Immersion, Enchantment and Autonomy by Colin Sterling
- Putting the Life back into Livestock in Archaeology by Andrew Reid
- A Stored-Products Revolution in the 1st Millennium BC by Andrew Bevan
The latest issue also includes shorter research reports and updates on the following topics:
- Survey and Digital Documentation of Endangered Temple Wall Paintings in Shanxi Province, China
- Investigating Radical Deaths and the Cultures That Practiced Them: New AHRC Funded Research at the Institute of Archaeology
- Sudan and the Petrie Museum: Histories of Display, Scholarship and Engagement
- Analysing Deposition and Site Formation Processes in Medieval Cess Pits Using Bone Fragmentation
In addition to the usual Editorial and the Institute's Director's Report, information on Studying at the UCL Institute of Archaeology: Past and Present is provided. The annual bookshelf of recent publications, a selection of recent news as well as obituaries are included as well as A Global Perspective on the Past: The Institute of Archaeology Around the World.
The journal is published by Ubiquity Press and is normally available online as well as in print and is fully open access. Archive issues are also available via the link below.