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Current Archaeology Live! 2021

2 mins read

A weekend of free virtual talks:
all the latest archaeological discoveries and research from Britain and beyond

5-7 March 2021
Free, online

Join us for Current Archaeology Live! 2021, which will run from 5-7 March. While this year’s event will be entirely online, and things will look a bit different to what you are used to, we still have an excellent line-up of leading archaeological experts from across the UK to share their latest thinking on all aspects of the past. The speakers confirmed so far are listed below, and we will be adding more to this line up in the coming days.

In order to make the event as accessible as possible, all the talks have been pre-recorded and then uploaded to the Current Archaeology YouTube channel for you to enjoy at your leisure during the conference weekend. To join in, simply click on the talk titles in the list below, or go directly to YouTube at www.youtube.com/c/CurrentArchaeology. The videos will all be available for at least a week, so you can watch them in whatever order you prefer, at your convenience, with no concerns about sticking to a prescribed timetable (though, unfortunately, you will need to provide your own tea and biscuits for breaks this year!). Titles marked with an asterisk will only be available until 14 March.

Questions for Speakers

While we won’t be able to facilitate the usual live Q&A at the end of each talk, you can use this form here over the conference weekend for submitting questions to our speakers. We will pass them on to the archaeologists and answers will be posted on our website after the conference.

List of Speakers

To watch a talk, click on the linked talk title and it will take you directly to the presentation in YouTube.
* Titles marked with an asterisk will only be available until 14 March.


Natasha Billson, Behind the Trowel
Archaeologists in Quarantine

Professor David Breeze
Was Hadrian’s Wall an expensive folly?

Professor Joanna Brück, University College Dublin
Keeping the dead close: Bronze Age relics in context

Nick Card, University of the Highlands and Islands
Ness of Brodgar: as it stands

Jo Caruth, Cotswold Archaeology
The Clare Castle Country Park community excavation*

Nathalie Cohen, National Trust
The archaeology of home

Dr Chantal Conneller, Newcastle University
The people at the edge of the world: Ice Age art in Jersey

Dr Abeer Eladany, University of Aberdeen
Rediscovering museum collections: from the Great Pyramid to Aberdeen

Alex Fitzpatrick, University of Bradford
Cave of wonders: ritual and funerary zooarchaeology at the Covesea Caves

Anna Forrest, National Trust
Between the cracks: underfloor archaeology at Oxburgh Hall

Dr Melanie Giles, University of Manchester
Bog bodies: the story of Worsley Man*

Susan Greaney, English Heritage/Cardiff University
Rise of the mega-henges? A new chronology for Mount Pleasant Henge, Dorset

Professor Ian Haynes and Tony Wilmott, Newcastle University/Historic England
Maryport: investigating a cult centre on Rome’s north-west frontier

Dr Janice Kinory, University of Oxford
Old images, new perspectives: the HEIR Project

Paddy Lambert, Oxford Archaeology East
The Priors Hall temple-mausoleum

Professor Martin Millett, University of Cambridge
(presenting a talk by Dr Rose Ferraby and Professor Martin Millett)
Roman Aldborough

Dr Coralie Mills, Dendrochronicle
Dendrochronology in Scotland’s archaeology, buildings, and landscapes*

Ayushi Nayak, Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History
Stable isotope approaches to social differentiation in Indus Valley cities

Richard Osgood, MOD/Operation Nightingale
A little house on the prairie: searching for Late Bronze Age settlements on Salisbury Plain

Dr Martin Papworth, National Trust
New dating evidence at Chedworth Roman Villa

Dr Miles Russell, Bournemouth University
In the footsteps of Vespasian: defining the fortress of the II Augusta at Wimborne Minster, Dorset

Jason Sandy & Nick Stevens, Society of Thames Mudlarks
Thames mudlarking

Kate Sumnall, Museum of London
Behind the scenes of the Havering Hoard

Dr Matthew Symonds, Current World Archaeology
Hadrian’s Wall: creating division

Dr Hugh Willmott, University of Sheffield
Dealing with the dead: excavations at the Hospital of St James,
Thornton Abbey

Dr Rebecca Wragg Sykes, University of Liverpool/Université de Bordeaux
Neanderthals in the outermost west


Current Archaeology Awards

The winners of the 2021 Current Archaeology Awards were announced by Julian Richards on 5 March over on our YouTube channel. Click here to watch the announcement, and you can find out more about all the nominees by clicking here.