Uncovering 8,000 years of life and death on the Cotswold Edge Recent excavations at Milestone Ground on the eastern edge of Broadway…
Evidence that some of our prehistoric ancestors travelled considerable distances has come from two graves in Upper Largie, near Kilmartin in Argyll…
Bath — Aquae Sulis — was one of the jewels of Romano-British civilisation. What happened to it when the Romans left? Roman…
In CA 213, the Opinion article on Community Archaeology: Against the Odds outlined a problem of exclusion arising from the commercialisation and…
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…