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Archaeology and Palaeoecology

ARCHAEOLOGY AND PALAEOECOLOGY RESEARCH

Archaeology studies the development of humanity by examining surviving material remains (e.g. tombs, temples, settlements, skeletons, artefacts and the landscape context from which they were recovered). Through the information gained it is possible to trace our economic, cultural, social and spiritual developments through time. At Queen’s, Palaeoecology complements Archaeology by studying the nature and timing of environmental changes in the past, including climate change. This brings a highly integrated approach to assessing how human activities have been shaped by and, in turn, have impacted upon the natural environment and a means to disentangle human impact from natural variability.

Although, by their very nature, Archaeology and Palaeoecology are concerned with the past, both disciplines have a role in the present, as well as the future. The threats to our environment and landscape through urban, industrial and agricultural development have never been greater. Globally, archaeological and environmental heritage is at threat from conflict and climate change. Archaeologists and palaeoecologists are at the forefront of the preservation and management of cultural evidence from the past – monuments, artefacts and landscapes, while increasingly work in this field also incorporates attention to ecological conservation. The past is also relevant to how people construct identities in the present and many of the careers available for archaeologists and palaeoecologists stem from the need to evaluate and manage the different dimensions of this heritage.

While Archaeology & Palaeoecology has a long tradition of researching Irish archaeology, our staff are also involved in projects across the globe, in Africa, Asia, the Americas and Europe. Our work stretches from the time of early hominins, hundreds of thousands of years ago, right up to the twenty-first century. Staff have a diverse range of research interests, including prehistoric stone technology and metalworking; medieval buildings; human and animal bones; tree-ring dating; pollen analysis; tephrochronology; childhood in the past; trading networks and migration, heritage management, and computational approaches to Archaeology and Palaeoecology including survey, mapping and remote sensing. Our graduates are equipped with a diverse subject-specific and generic skill-set that will enable them to successfully pursue careers in Archaeology & Palaeoecology in addition to many other fields, such as teaching, forensics or environmental work.

KEY RESEARCH PROJECTS

NAVAN FORT
The Navan Fort and Environs Project

Navan Fort is Northern Ireland's premier archaeological complex, famed in literature as the capital of the ancient province of Ulster. The Navan Fort and Environs Project undertakes large-scale geophysical surveys at the site itself and in its surroundings, as well as excavations within the core complex, aimed at evaluating the long-term evolution of this landscape from the Bronze Age to the medieval period, in order to illuminate it role as a major centre of ceremony, ritual and power in the first millennium BC and first millennium AD. 

The project is being supported by funding from the Leverhulme Trust, Armagh-Banbridge-Craigavon Council, and the Historic Environment Fund of Northern Ireland.

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FROM BOOM TO BUST
Metal Supply and Social Networks in the Irish Later Bronze Age

Over the course of the Bronze Age (c. 2500-800 BC), the growing demand for copper shaped new exchange networks and established new communities of practice. While for the earlier part of that period, the role of Ireland in the relevant Atlantic networks is reasonably well understood, the same does not hold true for the Later Bronze Age, when Ireland had ceased to be a net exporter and become a net importer of copper. 

This UKRI-funded project aims to address that lacuna in our understanding by establishing the sources of the copper consumed in Ireland after the island lost its role as a supplier of that metal to other regions and by providing a more reliable chronological framework for Irish Later Bronze Age metalwork.

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LOP NUR PROJECT
The role of environmental change in the rise and fall of oasis-desert civilisation in the Lop Nur region, northwest China

This project focuses on how societies adapt to the changing climate of a hyper-arid Lop Nur region in the Tarim Basin, a key area of central Asia. The region was an international crossroad of Old-World networks and witnessed four phases of civilisation development since the late Pleistocene. 

The China Scholarship Council-funded research aims to place these desert-oasis cultures within the context of dynamic landscape changes and alterations in natural resource availability, and will determine the causes of development and abandonment based on forms of mutualism between human societies and the climate environment.

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Research Expertise of Archaeology and Palaeocology Staff:

  • Palaeoecology
  • Later Prehistory
  • Artefact Studies 
  • Medieval Archaeology
  • Remote Sensing 
  • Historic Archaeology
  • Archaeological Theory 
  • Neolithic Archaeology
  • Physical Anthropology
  • Copper Age to Iron Age in Eurasia 
  • Archaeology of Cult and Religion
  • Early Medieval Settlements
  • Archaeozoology 
  • Landscape Archaeology
  • Human Osteoarchaeology
  • Tephrochronology 
  • Radiocarbon Dating
  • Stable Isotope Analysis 

RESEARCH CENTRES 

Student studying in McClay
Research Centres and Facilities

Archaeology & Palaeoecology houses a number of major research Centres, while its staff also collaborate and utilise cutting-edge facilities across the University. These include:

CHRONO Centre 

Centre for Community Archaeology 

Stable Isotope Facility 

Genomics Core Technology Unit

Mass Spectrometry Core Technology Unit 

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OUR STAFF

STAFF NAME RESEARCH INTERESTS E-MAIL
Dr Maarten Blaauw Palaeoecology, statistical interpretation of proxy archives  maarten.blaauw@qub.ac.uk
Dr Dirk Brandherm Later Prehistory, artefact studies  d.brandherm@qub.ac.uk
Dr Patrick Gleeson Medieval archaeology, remote sensing  p.gleeson@qub.ac.uk
Prof (Emeritus) James Mallory Archaeology and linguistics, Copper Age to Iron Age in Eurasia  j.mallory@qub.ac.uk
Prof (Emerita) Caroline Malone Neolithic, archaeology of cult and religion  c.malone@qub.ac.uk 
Dr William Megarry Landscape archaeology, heritage management  w.megarry@qub.ac.uk
Prof Eileen Murphy Human osteoarchaeology, archaeology of childhood  eileen.murphy@qub.ac.uk
Prof (Emeritus) Jonathan Pilcher Cryptotephra; Palynology; Mid- to Late Holocene environmental change

j.pilcher@qub.ac.uk 

Dr Eóin Parkinson Human bioarchaeology, megalithism and ritual in prehistory e.parkinson@qub.ac.uk 
Prof Gill Plunkett Palaeoecology, pollen and plant macrofossil analysis, tephrochronology  g.plunkett@qub.ac.uk
Dr Ryan Rabett Palaeolithic, Southeast Asian archaeology  r.rabett@qub.ac.uk
Prof (Emerita) Paula Reimer Radiocarbon dating, stable isotope analysis  p.j.reimer@qub.ac.uk

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