ADS blog
Internet Archaeology Goes Fully Open Access
Internet Archaeology is pleased to announce that it has become a fully open access journal. From this month Internet Archaeology’s 130 institutional subscribers from the UK, USA, Australia…
Internet Archaeology is pleased to announce that it has become a fully open access journal. From this month Internet Archaeology’s 130 institutional subscribers from the UK, USA, Australia…
This term ADS are pleased to welcome Fabrizio Galeazzi, a new Marie Curie post doctoral fellow, who will be working with us and the Centre for Digital…
The consistency and integrity of data is essential for any digital archive. Therefore, for the past few months we have been running a series of programs…
The Parliamentary Office of Science and Technology (POST) hosted an exhibition in the Members’ Dining Room in the House of Commons on Tuesday (15th July) to…
I regularly suffer from cases of mistaken identity. It’s just as well that my namesake “Meet the Ancestors” Julian Richards and I get on well, as we…
It was the Day of Archaeology last Friday and ADS are a big supporter of the event which raises the profile of ‘what archaeologists really…
The ADS, supported by funding from the Archives and Records Association, has begun a new project to improve digital archive deposition and create new tools for disseminating guidance and…
ADS staff will be out in force for the Center for Digital Heritage extravaganza of summer events taking place this July.
We were very pleased to recently release our first archive which was deposited with us via ADS-easy. Oxford Archaeology (South) deposited a small archive of the…
The annual CAA (Computer Applications and Quantitative Methods in Archaeology) conference took place in the impressive surroundings of the Sorbonne. The Archaeology Data Service and Internet Archaeology were…
The Grey Literature Library is one of the ADS’s most popular resources, and as shown by projects such as the Roman Rural Landscape, one that is…