ADS blog
Casting an eye on the new web templates for ADS Archives
As we announced back in March, the ADS is due to launch a series of new features for the ADS Archives templates that provide an accessible…
As we announced back in March, the ADS is due to launch a series of new features for the ADS Archives templates that provide an accessible…
Towards the end of 2023 the ADS Library passed a considerable milestone of 80,000 fieldwork reports. This corpus is now one of the largest collections of…
The Council for British Archaeology’s Festival of Archaeology launched this year on the 15th July. In celebration of this event, we at the ADS and Internet…
Our sibling publisher, The Internet Archaeology Journal has recently published the latest Europae Archaeologiae Consilium (EAC) symposium proceedings – ‘Archaeology and the Natural Environment’. IA has…
If there is one thing that I really enjoy, it’s exploring data spatially. I really enjoy being able to look at a map and see where…
As part of the CBA’s #FestivalOfArchaeology in 2020, I spent a light-hearted day revisiting some of Internet Archaeology’s and ADS’s milestones. I also asked those whose…
The ADS Library now holds over 50,000 downloadable grey literature reports!Thank you to all the archivists who have worked hard preserving, archiving and disseminating these files and to all of our depositors who continue to make our Grey Literature Collections such a rich resource!
Hi Anastasia Akerman here again, after spending time working on the ADS library I thought it would be fun to share with you a few gems…
This blog post is the last in a series I (Michaela Mauriello) have published following my investigations into the use and re-use of 3D data held…
Over the past year I, (Michaela Mauriello) have been doing a work placement with the ADS as part of my MSc degree at the University of…
Hi Michaela Mauriello here, this is the second post in my blog series on the use and re-use of 3D data from the ADS archive. Following the…
Hello I am Michaela Mauriello and this is the first post in a three part blog series on my investigations into the use and re-use of…
Over the last decade, archaeological 3D data has become more accessible to the public. There are online archives, similar to the ADS, where users can 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…
ADS and Internet Archaeology have been taking part in Open Access Week. Open Access Week is an international event now where the academic and research community…