🌐✨ Support open access archaeological data! The Open Access Archaeology fund supports Internet Archaeology publishing and @ADS_Update archiving costs for those without institutional support. Learn how to donate or to request support: intarch.ac.uk/about/donate.h…#OpenAccess
ALT A picture of three old books that read 'Open Access Archaeology Fund, ADS, Intarch'
New in IA73: Wellbeing and Archaeology (theme)
This collection of articles shows the power of heritage-led #wellbeing and how it can help progress the democratisation of #heritage, diversify #engagement and help address societal #inequalities. doi.org/10.11141/ia.73
A new Internet Archaeology article on the Neolithic pit structure at Durrington Walls Henge includes new OSL dates and sedaDNA environmental studies. Results indicate a cohesive pit structure at a massive scale.
doi.org/10.11141/ia.69.19#Stonehenge@UniofBradford#archaeology
This work (just published in IA) has confirmed that Durrington Walls henge, itself one of the largest prehistoric enclosures in Britain, was ringed by a large structure of at least 16 massive pits, many of which measured 10m in diameter & up to 5m deep
news.st-andrews.ac.uk/archiv…
A new Internet Archaeology article on the Neolithic pit structure at Durrington Walls Henge includes new OSL dates and sedaDNA environmental studies. Results indicate a cohesive pit structure at a massive scale.
doi.org/10.11141/ia.69.19#Stonehenge@UniofBradford#archaeology
West, E., Christie, C., Moretti, D, Scholma-Mason, O. and Smith, A. 2024 A Route Well Travelled. The Archaeology of the A14 Huntingdon to Cambridge Road Improvement Scheme, Internet Archaeology 67 doi.org/10.11141/ia.67.22
New issue: From Treasure Hunters to Citizen Scientists: Metal detecting and archaeological heritage in the Nordic region edited by Eljas Oksanen, Suzie Thomas, Pieterjan Deckers, Andres S. Dobat and Anna Wessman
intarch.ac.uk/journal/issue6…
New in IA69: Towards an Archaeology of Routeways: A case study from the North York Moors National Park by David Stapley
doi.org/10.11141/ia.69.7
A typology is proposed and the article includes an interactive map to aid visualisation
ALT This photo depicts a vast, open landscape under a dramatic, overcast sky. There are no patches of blue, and the light is diffuse. The immediate foreground and midground are covered in low-lying vegetation, following a controlled burn. In the distance, the land rises to form a gentle hill or ridge with a dip (holloway) noticeable beside the outline of a round barrow.
I escape the office this week and will be at #CIfA2025 if you would like to chat digital publication. I will be on the stand with my lovely @ADS_Update colleagues
The Melsonby Hoard is an astonishing Iron Age discovery that could transform our understanding of Britain’s past.
Supporting the fund will ensure that it is not dispersed into private collections or even taken out of the UK
crowdfunder.co.uk/p/save-the…
Just published: Urban Archaeology and the Cities of Tomorrow. EAC symposium proceedings (issue 70) intarch.ac.uk/journal/issue7…
ALT Excavation of the 'Cinema' site in Chartres in 2005 (Image: Direction de l'Archéologie de Chartres Métropole). From Bryant, S. and Dupuis, M. 2025 Archaeology in the Changing Townscape: The Centre Region in France, Internet Archaeology 70. https://doi.org/10.11141/ia.70.12
'Internet Archaeology' is an #OpenAccess, independent, not-for-profit journal. @IntarchEditor publishes quality academic content and explores the potential of electronic publication through the inclusion of video, audio, searchable data sets, full-colour images and more. 'Internet Archaeology' is international in scope, a journal without borders, and all content is peer-reviewed:
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