ADS blog
Rural Settlement of Roman Britain
Tim Evans In June 2013 I wrote the first in what I planned to be a two part blog describing my work on the Rural Settlement of Roman…
Tim Evans In June 2013 I wrote the first in what I planned to be a two part blog describing my work on the Rural Settlement of Roman…
Internet Archaeology and the Archaeology Data Service have teamed up to provide an Award that recognises the outstanding work being carried out through the re-use of digital…
Re-posted from Day of Archaeology Two years after posting about my work on the Silbury Hill digital archive, in ‘AN ADS DAY OF ARCHAEOLOGY’, and I’m still busy…
Internet Archaeology is delighted to announce that we have been awarded the Directory of Open Access Journals (DOAJ) Seal. The DOAJ is an online directory that indexes…
For a great deal of human history, wood has been an important construction material and remnants of ancient wood are preserved to this day in archaeological…
ADS and the Digital Collaboratory for Cultural Dendrochronology are pleased to announce that a new Guide to Good Practice on Dendrochronological Data in Archaeology will be available soon.…
ADS and Internet Archaeology have been integrating ORCID iDs to archives and articles for a while now, and with over 1.3 million ORCID iDs issued we are sure…
What is archaeology? An adventure? A pain in the neck? The appeal of the past? The magic of marvelous sites? A dusty museum? Probably all of…
The ADS is excited to announce that we now have over 30,000 reports in our Grey Literature Library. Since the start of 2015, 734 reports have been added…
Since April 2012 I have been fortunate enough to be the ADS lead in the Roman Rural Settlement of Britain project, undertaken by Mike Fulford and a small team…
The ADS is currently a partner in three major European projects, and all are well on their way. We have passed the midpoints for the three-year Local…