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Journal article
Excavations at Moorgate Telephone Exchange, London EC2Y
Lewis, Hana
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A third late Saxon floor tile from London
Betts, Ian
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The church and cloisters of Austin Friars
Holder, N. ; Samuel, M. ; Betts, I.
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Saxon London : milestones and challenges
Cowie, Robert
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Excavations at 41 Eastcheap, London EC3
Pitt, Ken
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The Guy's Hospital Roman boat fifty years on
Watson, Bruce
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The Bronze Age landscape of Greenwich Peninsula
Nicholls, Mary
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Entering the real world of our greatest playwright
Bowsher, J.M.C.
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From the Spreadsheet to the Table? Using 'spot-dating' level pottery records from Roman London to explore functional trends among open vessel forms
Intensive excavation and research over the course of decades have produced a very large dataset relating to Roman pottery from London. Research into the function of specific vessel forms has rarely been undertaken but information about the size, shape, fabric and condition of vessels recorded during routine identification and quantification...Marshall, Michael ; Seeley, Fiona
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The Minories Eagle : a new sculpture from London’s eastern Roman cemetery
The limestone sculpture of an eagle firmly clasping a serpent in its beak was recovered from within the eastern Roman cemetery of London on the last day of excavations at 24–26 Minories, EC3 in September 2013. The sculpture, which is dated stylistically to the late first or early second century...Lerz, Antonietta
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Catch Per Unit Research Effort : Sampling Intensity, Chronological Uncertainty, and the Onset of Marine Fish Consumption in Historic London.
As the cumulative volume of ecofactual data from archaeological sites mounts, the analytical tools required for its synthesis have not always kept pace. While recent attention has been devoted to spatial aspects of meta-analysis, the methodological challenges of chronological synthesis have been somewhat neglected. Nowhere is this issue more acute...Orton, David ; Morris, James ; Pipe, Alan
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The National Planning Policy Framework and Archaeology
This helpful addition to the literature and thinking around planning and archaeology comes at an exciting time, as the Localism Act, streamlining of non-planning consents, economic recession and political change all converge. It is striking, in the review of archaeology and planning policy over some thirty years, what a revolution...Nixon, Taryn
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The challenges and opportunities for mega-infrastructure projects and archaeology
Jay Carver’s paper is very useful in summarising the process that Crossrail has followed and identifing the key factors in managing the risk, and maximising the benefits, associated with archaeology on major infrastructure projects. MOLA (Museum of London Archaeology) has been involved in many of London’s infrastructure projects, at the...Jackson, Sophie
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The Thames Discovery Programme : Public Engagement and Research on London’s Foreshore
The Thames Discovery Programme (TDP) – a community archaeology project funded by the Heritage Lottery Fund (from 2008–2011) and now hosted by Museum of London Archaeology – has maintained close links with UCL throughout the lifetime of the project. This continues the association established by our predecessor project, the Thames...Cohen, Nathalie ; Milne, Gustav ; Wragg, Eliott
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An important 16th-century finds assemblage from ‘Moorfields’, Liverpool Street, London
Excavation at Liverpool Street, London, for Crossrail Limited, uncovered two large drains and a pit in an area of the city known since the medieval period as ‘Moorfields’. Their fills can be closely dated to the mid 16th century and included artefacts such as personal possessions, domestic utensils and refuse,...Cubitt, Rachel S. ; Hartle, Robert ; Marshall, Michael ; Richardson, Beth ; Allison, Enid …
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Phylogeography of the second plague pandemic revealed through analysis of historical Yersinia pestis genomes
The second plague pandemic, caused by Yersinia pestis, devastated Europe and the nearby regions between the 14th and 18th centuries AD. Here we analyse human remains from ten European archaeological sites spanning this period and reconstruct 34 ancient Y. pestis genomes. Our data support an initial entry of the bacterium... -
Journal article
Whither archaeologists? Continuing challenges to field practice
Current archaeological practice in the UK and elsewhere focuses on the collection of empirical data. While scholars have proposed theoretical advances in field techniques, very few of these methods have been adopted in commercial archaeology. A combination of increased time pressure on development projects and the conservatism of the sector...Watson, Sadie
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