Issue 409 - February 2026

One clearly visible result of climate change is the threat to the wetland archaeological record and the urgent need for mitigating solutions. For example, these types of areas often preserve remarkable archaeological sites and organic material, including wooden structures and artefacts, leather, fibres and human remains, which highlights the need to preserve the fragile heritage of European peatlands. Threats to in situ archaeology are visible at Hatfield Neolithic Corduroy trackway (Lincolnshire, east England) with damage from drainage and peat extraction. Photograph courtesy of Birmingham Archaeo-Environmental. For details, see debate article Last chance to see? The ‘Crisis of Preservation’ and pathways to a sustainable future for Europe’s peatland archaeology by Benjamin Gearey et al. in this issue.

Editorial: green archaeology

Vol 100 Issue 409, 1-16  |  Free to read

New Book Chronicle: storytelling in archaeology

Vol 100 Issue 409, 257-265  |  Free to read
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Research Articles

The Kura-Araxes culture spread over a large area of South-west Asia, participating in the transformational dynamics of Early Bronze Age societies in the region. Yet, the absence of a robust chronological framework for this cultural horizon hinders its integration into wider regional and interregional models. Drawing on a substantial new radiocarbon dataset, collating novel Bayesian chronological models for eight sites and existing data from the wider region, this article identifies settlement patterns that coincide with broader reconfigurations of the Kura-Araxes cultural landscape, which in turn track socioeconomic, and possibly political, shifts observed in eastern Anatolia and the greater Near East.

Origins, endings and temporal pluralities: Bayesian perspectives on the Kura-Araxes phenomenon

Annapaola Passerini et al.
Vol 100 Issue 409, 17-37  |  Read for free | Share

This study of red ochre in mortuary contexts in Neolithic to Iron Age sites in Thailand reveals regional and temporal variation. Used extensively at Neolithic Khok Phanom Di, often as body paint, the material was absent at contemporaneous inland sites. Its reappearance in the Bronze Age signalled a symbolic shift in practice, with pieces of ochre incorporated into elaborate funerary rituals. These patterns suggest differing cultural origins and evolving rituals. By the Iron Age, ochre use declined, coinciding with the spread of new mortuary ideologies. The authors highlight how ochre is a powerful marker of identity, belief and cultural change.

Ochre use in burial practices in Thailand, from the Neolithic to the Iron Age

Sarah Elizabeth Paris & Charles Higham
Vol 100 Issue 409, 38-55  |  Read for free | Share

Between 2011 and 2017, excavations by a joint German-Georgian team at the Tabakoni settlement mound in the Colchis lowlands of western Georgia uncovered complex wooden constructions preserved in the waterlogged soils. Combined radiocarbon and dendrochronological dating, the first undertaking of its kind in Colchis, reveals that construction on a stable foundation for the site began in the twentieth century BC and identifies early evidence for the cultivation of millet. Subsequent occupation phases saw the careful levelling of previous structures and the addition of backfill, gradually building up the mound until it was ultimately abandoned in the second half of the first millennium BC.

Dating Tabakoni: the chronology of a Bronze Age settlement mound in Colchis

Tobias Mörtz et al.
Vol 100 Issue 409, 56-74  |  Read for free | Share

The Roman occupation of England (AD 43–410), characterised by urbanisation and militarisation, is generally understood to have had a negative impact on population health. Yet our understanding of associated socioeconomic changes is hindered by the comparatively limited analysis of inhumations from the preceding Iron Age. Deploying the DOHaD hypothesis, this study examines negative health markers in the skeletons of 274 adult females of childbearing age and 372 non-adults aged below 3.5 years from Iron Age and Roman contexts, revealing the long-lasting negative influence of urbanisation but with a more limited impact in rural communities implying continuation of cultural norms.

Assessing the impact of Roman occupation on England through the Developmental Origins of Health and Disease (DOHaD) hypothesis

Rebecca Pitt
Vol 100 Issue 409, 75-92  |  Read for free | Share

Regular finds of glassware at Roman sites provide a useful dataset not just for constructing glass typologies but for the comparative analysis of base-glass compositions. Here, the authors explore the form and chemical composition of 79 glass fragments from Khirbet al-Khalde, a strategically important site in southern Jordan that was integrated into a major Roman roadway, the Via Nova Traiana, in the early second century AD. Their findings challenge current models, identifying abundant pre-fourth-century Egyptian glassware in an area believed to be predominantly supplied by Syro-Palestine and providing evidence for continued activity at the site into the eighth century.

Broken glass on the Via Nova Traiana: Roman, Late Antique and Early Islamic activity at Khirbet al-Khalde (south Jordan)

Cristina Boschetti et al.
Vol 100 Issue 409, 93-110  |  Read for free | Share

The history of games is obscured by our inability to recognise indicators of play in the archaeological record. Lines incised on a piece of rounded limestone found at the Roman site of Coriovallum in Heerlen, The Netherlands, evoke a board game yet do not reflect the grid of any game known today. Here, the results of use-wear analysis are used to inform artificial intelligence-driven simulations based on permutations of rules from historic Northern European games. Disproportionate wear along specific lines favours the rules of blocking games, potentially extending the time depth and regional use of this game type.

Ludus Coriovalli: using artificial intelligence-driven simulations to identify rules for an ancient board game

Walter Crist et al.
Vol 100 Issue 409, 111-126  |  Read for free | Share

The Church of Mary in Ephesos (Türkiye)—a major early Christian site—was founded in the early fifth century CE and used as a funerary space until the fifteenth century. While burials have been documented in excavations at the site since the 1980s, mortuary practices were not systematically evaluated. A new campaign in 2023 permitted the application of modern archaeothanatological methods during the excavation of three graves, identifying reduction and reuse practices previously undocumented at the site. Together with the reanalysis of earlier excavation reports, these findings allow a more nuanced understanding of burial practices at this early Christian centre.

Burial practices in Byzantine Ephesos: new archaeothanatological data from the Church of Mary cemetery

Caroline Partiot et al.
Vol 100 Issue 409, 127-144  |  Read for free | Share

Stretching for 1.5km and consisting of approximately 5200 precisely aligned holes, Monte Sierpe in southern Peru is a remarkable construction that likely dates to at least the Late Intermediate Period (AD 1000–1400) and saw continued use by the Inca (AD 1400–1532). Yet its function remains uncertain. Here, the authors report on new analyses of drone imagery and sediment samples that reveal numerical patterns in layout, potential parallels with Inca knotted-string records and the presence of crops and wild plants. All this, the authors argue, suggests that Monte Sierpe functioned as a local, Indigenous system of accounting and exchange.

Indigenous accounting and exchange at Monte Sierpe (‘Band of Holes’) in the Pisco Valley, Peru

Jacob L. Bongers et al.
Vol 100 Issue 409, 145-163  |  Read for free | Share

Shipwrecks provide invaluable insights into human society and trade. Their unique preservation conditions also mean that they can serve as exceptional biobanks, recording traces of organisms carried aboard or arriving post wreck. Yet only limited research has explored the genetic potential of onboard sediments. Here, the authors present environmental and metagenomic analyses of sediments contained in a large amphora from the 150-year-old Yangzi Estuary II shipwreck. Weaving the results with historic texts, they reconstruct part of the history of the wrecked vessel, elucidating cargo-packing techniques, its likely season and port of sailing, and its ultimate submersion within the estuarine environment.

Life history of the Yangzi Estuary II shipwreck: environmental DNA from sediment in a 150-year-old amphora

Xiaolin Ma et al.
Vol 100 Issue 409, 164-181 | Share

Despite repeated calls for action from various sources, peatland archaeological sites continue to deteriorate; the passive strategy of preservation in situ is failing. Here, the authors consider four challenges to peatland preservation—physical degradation, mapping and monitoring of sites, communication, and policy frameworks—with climate change ultimately causing further problems. Drawing on positive policy developments in England, they argue that advocacy for peatland archaeology needs to be louder and clearer: archaeology must become an integral consideration in all climate-change mitigation and land-use planning, rather than an afterthought, if the fragile heritage of European peatlands is to be preserved.

Last chance to see? The ‘Crisis of Preservation’ and pathways to a sustainable future for Europe’s peatland archaeology

Benjamin Gearey et al.
Vol 100 Issue 409, 182-195  |  Read for free | Share

Global biodiversity is decreasing at an alarming rate, and Britain is now one of the most nature-depleted countries on the planet. This matters to archaeologists as it places limitations on our personal experience of ‘nature’ and damages the collective archaeological imagination, diluting our capacity to envisage the richness and diversity of the past worlds we seek to understand. Here, the author argues that we must learn, from contemporary biodiversity projects, animate Indigenous worldviews and enmeshed human-nonhuman ecosystems, to rewild our minds—for the sake of the past worlds we study and the future worlds that our narratives help shape.

The biodiversity crisis, the wild and the archaeological imagination

Anna Collar
Vol 100 Issue 409, 196-206  |  Read for free | Share

Debate

Archaeologists often proclaim that they have much to contribute to the ‘global challenges’ of the twenty-first century, yet they find little space at the policymaking table. In this debate article, the authors argue that archaeologists seeking practical relevance must start with a critical, expanded understanding of the contemporary, including how communities, stakeholders and complex policy structures operate to navigate unfolding socioecological crises. They propose a reversed historical directionality grounded in transdisciplinary research design that integrates contemporary challenges and community-defined priorities from the outset to foster a dynamic, future-facing dialogue that more readily informs pathways to tangible impact.

A space at the table? Global challenges and contemporary archaeology as plural transdisciplinary design for the future

Matthew Davies & Samuel Lunn-Rockliffe
Vol 100 Issue 409, 207-217  |  Read for free | Share
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Multiple pathways to applied archaeology, actionability and intervention: a response to Davies & Lunn-Rockliffe

Christian Isendahl
Vol 100 Issue 409, 218-220  |  Read for free | Share
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Local and community action with global scope: a response to Davies & Lunn-Rockliffe

Sarah Kerr
Vol 100 Issue 409, 221-223  |  Read for free | Share
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Four challenges for usable/applied archaeologies

Matthew Davies & Samuel Lunn-Rockliffe
Vol 100 Issue 409, 224-228  |  Read for free | Share

Review Articles and New Book Chronicle

Decolonising ancient Egypt?

Rennan Lemos
Vol 100 Issue 409, 229-235  |  Read for free | Share

Excavating experience: methodological shifts in the study of Pompeii’s urban fabric

Jessica Venner
Vol 100 Issue 409, 236-242  |  Read for free | Share

New Book Chronicle: storytelling in archaeology

Marion Uckelmann
Vol 100 Issue 409, 257-265  |  Read for free | Share

Book Reviews

2025

L’âge du Bronze en France (2500 à 800 avant notre ère). Synthèses thématiques

Cyril Marcigny & Claude Mordant (ed.)
Reviewed by Brendan O’Connor
Vol 100 Issue 409, 243-245  |  Read for free
2023

Brill's companion to warfare in the Bronze Age Aegean

Lynne A. Kvapil & Kim Shelton (ed.)
Reviewed by Yannick de Raaff
Vol 100 Issue 409, 245-248
2024

La principauté celtique du Mont Lassois à Vix. Fouilles 2011–2017

Bruno Chaume (ed.)
Reviewed by Manuel Fernández-Götz
Vol 100 Issue 409, 248-251
2025

Ancient Herat 1: documentation of archaeological sites and monuments in Herat Province

Ute Franke & Thomas Urban
Reviewed by Norman Hammond
Vol 100 Issue 409, 251-253
2024

Archaeology in a living landscape: envisioning nonhuman persons in the Indigenous Americas

Brent K. S. Woodfill & Lucia R. Henderson (ed.)
Reviewed by Laura Pey
Vol 100 Issue 409, 253-256  |  Read for free

Books Received

Books received

Vol 100 Issue 409, 266-270  |  Read for free | Share

Project Gallery

New excavations at Ormagi Ekhi in Georgia have revealed long-term hominin occupations during the Middle Palaeolithic (260–45 ka cal BP). Here, the authors present an overview of data from multidisciplinary analyses of the site, highlighting its potential for widening our understanding of hominin occupations in the South Caucasus.

Ormagi Ekhi (Georgia) and Middle Palaeolithic occupations in South Caucasus

Ana Mgeladze et al.
Vol 100 Issue 409  |  Read for free | Share

The discovery of cleavers and Levallois lithics around the Goab playa in eastern Iran suggests that this region holds significant potential for the study of early human societies and for investigating new hominin dispersal routes to other parts of the world, such as Eastern Asia.

Traces of hominin occupations in eastern Iran: Middle Pleistocene lithics from Khousf Plain in the Lut Desert margin

Seyyed Reza Rafei et al.
Vol 100 Issue 409  |  Read for free | Share

The authors present results of a recent project that challenges the perceived absence of Late Pleistocene human settlements in high-altitude areas of inland Spain. Despite the apparent geographic and bioclimatic constraints, these areas may contain archaeological material from diverse prehistoric periods.

New prehistoric occupations identified in the eastern Iberian Plateau

Francisco Javier Aragoncillo et al.
Vol 100 Issue 409  |  Read for free | Share

The Fenscapes project investigates trajectories of landscape, habitat and species change in the Fens of eastern England from the Neolithic to the present, with the aim to build self-reflective understandings of land-use and wetland management. Yet underlying biases exist in data patterning linked to burial depth and archaeological practice.

Fenscapes: archaeology, natural heritage and environmental change in the Fens of eastern England

Neal Payne et al.
Vol 100 Issue 409  |  Read for free | Share

Use-wear analysis is rarely conducted for ground stone axes (GSAs) from West Africa. Here, the results of use-wear analysis of 50 GSAs from Akwanga and other parts of Central Nigeria are discussed, contributing to our understanding of their functional attributes.

What were stone axes used for? Use-wear analysis of ground stone axes from Akwanga, central Nigeria

Okopi Ade
Vol 100 Issue 409  |  Read for free | Share

An intensive archaeological surface survey of the El Argar site and its hinterland has provided new information for the discussion of early sociopolitical complexity in the western Mediterranean. This article presents the preliminary interpretation of a long-term settlement pattern, particularly in the Bronze Age.

Surveying El Argar, Almeria, Spain: prehistoric settlement patterns and social processes

Borja Legarra Herrero et al.
Vol 100 Issue 409  |  Read for free | Share

Excavations at Aketala reveal traces of human activity at the oases of the western Tarim Basin, north-western China, by at least 2200 BC. The recovered artefacts indicate that, by 1800 BC, the Andronovo culture had reached this region, bringing agropastoralism and developing the earliest regional evidence of bronze manufacturing techniques.

The westernmost Bronze Age oasis settlement in the Tarim Basin: excavating at the Aketala sites

Kai Cao et al.
Vol 100 Issue 409  |  Read for free | Share

This article redefines the concept of the Achaemenid ‘Royal’ Road using GIS-based route modelling to reconstruct possible roads between Susa and Persepolis. By integrating logistical and environmental parameters, it shows how royal mobility required a specialised infrastructure—distinct from ancillary roads—tailored to the operational scale of the Achaemenid court.

‘Royal’ road, ‘royal’ needs: a GIS-based approach to Achaemenid court logistics between royal capitals of Susa and Persepolis

Davide Salaris
Vol 100 Issue 409  |  Read for free | Share

Residue analysis of small ceramic bottles from around Tyre in Lebanon reveals chemical traces of wine, resins, pitch and palm oil, indicating their multifunctional use. The authors state that these results enhance understanding of Phoenician container use, trade and production across diverse archaeological contexts.

Beyond perfumes: metabolomic study of Tyrian ceramic bottles

Urszula Wicenciak et al.
Vol 100 Issue 409  |  Read for free | Share

Atop El Castillo, the largest pyramid within the Maya site of Chichen Itza, in Mexico’s Yucatan Peninsula, stand two ruined columns that once portrayed the feathered serpent deity K’uk’ulkan. 3D-imaging technologies have identified scattered sculptural fragments belonging to these columns, allowing a digital reconstruction that opens new possibilities for their conservation.

Digital reconstruction of a serpent column at Chichen Itza’s El Castillo

Scott McAvoy et al.
Vol 100 Issue 409  |  Read for free | Share

Pre-construction archaeology in West Africa presents new avenues for understanding historic urban development. Excavation of two building plots for the Museum of West African Art, Benin City, Nigeria, provides new perspectives on the Kingdom of Benin, a significant polity in the West African forest zone during the second millennium AD.

MOWAA Archaeology Project: enhancing understanding of Benin City’s historic urban development and heritage through pre-construction archaeology

Caleb Folorunso et al.
Vol 100 Issue 409  |  Read for free | Share

The Ecologies of Violence project examines how war and state violence generate lasting human and more-than-human entanglements that disrupt conventional heritage frameworks. Through international and interdisciplinary case studies, it reveals how structural violence creates involuntary heritage and exclusion zones that call for a planetary, ecological archaeology attuned to the multispecies, (im)material, temporal and sociopolitical complexities of conflict.

Ecologies of Violence: Heritage and Conflict in More-than-Human Worlds

Esther Breithoff
Vol 100 Issue 409  |  Read for free | Share