📢JUA 7 has just been published. It is a special issue on Anomalous Giants edited by Roland Fletcher, Nam C. Kim, and Kirrily White. Find all articles OA here https://t.co/D67DqZOf65 #UrbanArchaeology#OpenAccess
Simulated processional routes in #RomanOstia make it possible for @Kate_Arch1 (@STARC_CyI) to investigate the connection between urban movement dynamics and ritual visibility. Follow the navigium Isidis procession in JUA 6⛵️ https://t.co/pPQfws6KlG
Tax law🪙 Goat-herding🐐 Fuel energy🔥
Which economic considerations were at play in the ancient desert society of #Palmyra? Prof Nathanael Andrade (@binghamtonu) and Prof Rubina Raja (@UrbNet1; @AarhusUni_int) disentangle urban economic patterns in JUA 6 https://t.co/JoOXmQso76
With medieval #Trondheim🇳🇴 and #Sigtuna🇸🇪 as cases, Prof. Axel Christophersen (@NTNUnorway) uses high-resolution archaeological data to show regional diversity in medieval monetary practices💰 In JUA 6! https://t.co/PqxclrBaOf #MedievalEconomy
Old rubbish is studied by @Warden_la (@RoanokeCollege), as she turns her attention to ceramic assemblages from fill layers in a house on Elephantine Island of #MiddleKingdomEgypt🏺 Read more in JUA 6 https://t.co/nLAIrGDZZT #ancientEgypt
Odd facts can often lead to original insights. How can anomalous urban societies inform theory and research on the urban past? Visit voluntary camps, #trypillia sites, medieval #RingForts, and many more anomalocivitates in the latest JUA volume 👉 https://t.co/pYJzH4GoZ4
If ancient cities are less like states and more like social networks, what are they about? My answer: weak ties and strange attractors. Very proud to have this major conceptual position piece out in @JUArch journal. https://t.co/5a8lwKlCMf
#AgathaChristie truly knew what drives us all: counting pots and proving other people wrong!🏺But when analysed and discussed, Christie’s poem ‘A-Sitting on a Tell’ makes strong arguments for high-definition narratives. Curious? Dig into The #Backfill https://t.co/I8pTvl8HXL
🏺”that pitfall of archaeological talent” – columnist Sid E. Dweller doesn’t share @JUArch’s love of theory. Read his humorous gem in The #Backfill👉 https://t.co/Lz3Jrf8ByE
A drinking bowl depicted in a 13th-cent. #manuscript, liberty-style tiles and #MaritimeRoutes! In @JUArch 3 research takes you to, among other places, medieval #Odense, central #Rome and the Malay city state of #Srivijaya 👉https://t.co/PXGiKrkqKe
A great new volume of @JUArch is now online. Contributions focus on network evolutions and high-definition narratives. Find it #OpenAccess here: https://t.co/PXGiKr2PlE
#UrbanHistory#Archaeology
Remember the upcoming deadline for submission of articles for Journal of Urban Archaeology 4📚: 1 February 2021. Find the two first volumes of @JUArch here: https://t.co/8Rco21CeTx
#OpenAccess#Archaeology#UrbanHistory