PGR Alumni
2020
Name |
Thesis Title |
Sam Nicholson | Going global: Palaeoclimate of Arabia and Human Evolution. |
Claire Nolan |
Therapeutic Landscapes of Prehistory: Exploring the Therapeutic Value and Potential of Prehistoric Landscapes in the Present Day. |
Charlotte Scull | Foodways of religious women in Anglo-Saxon and Medieval England. |
2019
Name |
Thesis Title |
Emily Carroll | Burning by numbers: Cremation and cultural transitions in Late Iron Age and Roman Britain (100BC - AD 410). |
Cecilia Collins | The Palaeopathology of Maxillary Sinusitis, Otitis Media and Mastoiditis in Medieval Iceland. |
Zoe Knapp | The Zooarchaeology of the Anglo-Saxon Christian Conversion: Lyminge, a case study. |
Candace McGovern | " A Women’s World: A Bioarchaeological Approach to the Romano-British Female Life Course." |
Mitchell Miranda | A Study in the Interrelationships of Humans and Cattle in the Early Bronze Age Near East. |
Monica Palmero Fernandez | Recontextualising Temple Construction and Commemorative Practices: The Case of Inanna/Astar in Early Dynastic Mesopotamia ca. 2600-2350 B.C. |
Carolina Rangel de Lima | Lighting Up Lusitania: The role of lighting equipment in the social, economic and ritual practices of the people of Lusitania. |
Sascha Valme | Puberty and Adolescent Health in Post-Medieval England (1550-1850). |
2018
Name |
Thesis Title |
Kirsten Barr | Prehistoric avian, mammalian and H sapiens footprint-tracks from intertidal sediments as evidence of human palaeoecology. |
Matthew Fittock | Fragile Gods: Ceramic Figurines in Roman Britain. |
Guido Guarducci | Nairi Lands: The Identity of the Local Communities of Eastern Anatolia, South Caucasus and Periphery during the Late Bronze and Early Iron Age. A Reassessment of the Material Culture and Socio-Economic Landscape. |
Owen Humphreys | Craft, Industry and Agriculture in a Roman City: The Iron Tools from London. |
Sara Machin | Constructing Calleva: a multidisciplinary study of the production, distribution, and consumption of ceramic building materials at the Roman town of Silchester, Hampshire. |
2017
Name |
Thesis Title |
Marialucia Amadio | Architecture and Urbanisation in Bronze Age Cyprus: local and regional innovations in materials, technology and social representation. |
Matthew Austin | Anglo-Saxon 'Great Hall Complexes': Elite Residences and Landscapes of Power in Early England, c. AD 550-700. |
Aroa Garcia Suarez | Investigating Neolithic ecology and settlement networks in the Konya Plain. |
Stella Kyrillidou | Settlement form and high-resolution microhistory of houses in prehistoric Greek Macedonia. |
Harriet Mahood | The Medieval Monastic Entrance Complex in England: Design, Function and Context. |
Simon Maslin | The Landscape and Ecology of the Anglo-Saxon Conversion: a multi-proxy environmental and geoarchaeological contextualisation of the high-status settlement at Lyminge, Kent. |
David Mudd | People and ground stone tools in the Zagros Neolithic - economic and social interpretations of the assemblage from Bestansur, Iraqi Kurdistan. |
Michael Simmonds | Examining the relationship between environmental change and human activities at the dryland-wetland interface during the late upper Palaeolithic and Mesolithic in south east England. |
Daniel Young | Holocene climate change in Southern Ireland. |
2016
Name |
Thesis Title |
Sarah Elliott | Investigating early animal management in the Zagros Mountains of Iran and Iraq: Integrating field and laboratory methods for the identification and analysis of ancient faecal material. |
Ingrid Iversen | Living in an Early Neolithic community. Investigation of the social structure of settlement by microartefactual analysis of spatial organisation of activities at Bestansur, Central Zagros and Boncuklu, Central Anatolia. |
Georgia Koromila | From Archaeological Sediments to Human Practice: a comparative geoarchaeological study of open areas in the Neolithic of northern Greece. |
Stephen Myers | The Greater Walbrook Valley - the River Walbrook and Roman London. |
Alice Rogers | Coastal Connections: The Archaeology of the British North Sea Coastline in the Neolithic and Early Bronze Age, 4000 - 1500 BC. |
Anna Rohnbogner | Dying young - a palaeopathological analysis of child health in Roman Britain. |