Cormack, Zoe (Dr.)
Zoe Cormack is a Leverhulme Early Career Fellow at the African Studies Centre, Oxford University and an honorary research affiliate at the Pitt Rivers Museum. Zoe has previously held research fellowships at the British School at Rome, the British Institute in East Africa and the Open University. Her most recent article, ‘Violence and the Trade in Ethnographic Artefacts in Nineteenth Century Sudan,’ is published in The Journal of Art Market Studies (2020).
Coudart, Anick (Prof. Dr.)
Anick Coudart is Research Professor at Arizona State University, and formerly Directeur de recherche at the CNRS. She was the co-founder and long-time editor-in-chief of the professional journal Les Nouvelles de l’Archéologie.
Cowley, Dave C. BA (BA)
Dave Cowley is an archaeologist in the Survey & Recording Group at Historic Environment Scotland, where he manages a programme of archaeological mapping. His research is focused on survey methodology and the development of the landscape, with a specific interest in Iron Age settlement patterns. He is undertaking part-time doctoral research at Ghent University on population in southeast Scotland in the period 1000 BC to AD 1000.
Crewe, Lindy (Dr.)
Lindy Crewe has been Director of the Cyprus American Archaeological Research Institute (CAARI) since 2017. Prior to this she was Lecturer in Archaeology at the University of Manchester. She obtained her PhD from the University of Edinburgh on the introduction of wheelmade pottery on Late Bronze Age Cyprus, with particular reference to the material from Enkomi, published as Early Enkomi: Regionalism, Trade and Society at the Beginning of the Late Bronze Age on Cyprus (2007). She is the author of two monographs and has contributed to and edited several volumes, including Figurine makers of prehistoric Cyprus. Settlement and cemeteries at Souskiou (E. Peltenburg, D. Bolger and L. Crewe, 2019). She has published numerous articles on Chalcolithic and Bronze Age topics including pottery and society, mortuary practices, textiles and trade. She is currently Directing excavations at the Bronze Age settlement of Kissonerga-Skalia near Paphos.
Cristiani, Emanuela (Dr.)
Dr Emanuela Cristiani is an Associate Professor in Prehistory at Sapienza University of Rome and she is director of the Ancient Diet and Technology Laboratory at the Department of Oral and Maxillo Facial Sciences. Dr Cristiani’s special research interest is the study of forager societies of southern Europe and the characterization of their identities, cultural traditions and dietary strategies through the study of the techno-functional choices connected with the production and use of material culture (knapped and ground stone tools, osseous artefacts and ornaments).
Cummings, Vicki (Prof. Dr.)
Vicki Cummings is Professor of Neolithic Archaeology at Cardiff University. Her research has focused on the start and spread of the Neolithic in Britain, Ireland and north-west Europe. She has a particular research interest in Early Neolithic monumentality, especially chambered tombs, and has excavated sites in Wales, Scotland and Ireland. More recently her work has focused on the Early Neolithic of Orkney as well as Early Neolithic kinship. She is the author of The Neolithic of Britain and Ireland and Monuments in the making: raising the great dolmens in early Neolithic northern Europe (with Colin Richards).
Cunningham, Penny (Dr.)
Penny Cunningham is currently an Honorary Research Fellow within the Department of Archaeology at the University of Exeter. After completing a MA in Experimental Archaeology she went on to complete a PhD at the University of Exeter. Penny used experiments as a major methodological approach in her PhD thesis Food for thought: the exploitation of nuts in prehistoric Europe.
Cormack, Zoe (Dr.)
Zoe Cormack is a Leverhulme Early Career Fellow at the African Studies Centre, Oxford University and an honorary research affiliate at the Pitt Rivers Museum. Zoe has previously held research fellowships at the British School at Rome, the British Institute in East Africa and the Open University. Her most recent article, ‘Violence and the Trade in Ethnographic Artefacts in Nineteenth Century Sudan,’ is published in The Journal of Art Market Studies (2020).
Coudart, Anick (Prof. Dr.)
Anick Coudart is Research Professor at Arizona State University, and formerly Directeur de recherche at the CNRS. She was the co-founder and long-time editor-in-chief of the professional journal Les Nouvelles de l’Archéologie.
Cowley, Dave C. BA (BA)
Dave Cowley is an archaeologist in the Survey & Recording Group at Historic Environment Scotland, where he manages a programme of archaeological mapping. His research is focused on survey methodology and the development of the landscape, with a specific interest in Iron Age settlement patterns. He is undertaking part-time doctoral research at Ghent University on population in southeast Scotland in the period 1000 BC to AD 1000.
Crewe, Lindy (Dr.)
Lindy Crewe has been Director of the Cyprus American Archaeological Research Institute (CAARI) since 2017. Prior to this she was Lecturer in Archaeology at the University of Manchester. She obtained her PhD from the University of Edinburgh on the introduction of wheelmade pottery on Late Bronze Age Cyprus, with particular reference to the material from Enkomi, published as Early Enkomi: Regionalism, Trade and Society at the Beginning of the Late Bronze Age on Cyprus (2007). She is the author of two monographs and has contributed to and edited several volumes, including Figurine makers of prehistoric Cyprus. Settlement and cemeteries at Souskiou (E. Peltenburg, D. Bolger and L. Crewe, 2019). She has published numerous articles on Chalcolithic and Bronze Age topics including pottery and society, mortuary practices, textiles and trade. She is currently Directing excavations at the Bronze Age settlement of Kissonerga-Skalia near Paphos.
Cristiani, Emanuela (Dr.)
Dr Emanuela Cristiani is an Associate Professor in Prehistory at Sapienza University of Rome and she is director of the Ancient Diet and Technology Laboratory at the Department of Oral and Maxillo Facial Sciences. Dr Cristiani’s special research interest is the study of forager societies of southern Europe and the characterization of their identities, cultural traditions and dietary strategies through the study of the techno-functional choices connected with the production and use of material culture (knapped and ground stone tools, osseous artefacts and ornaments).
Cummings, Vicki (Prof. Dr.)
Vicki Cummings is Professor of Neolithic Archaeology at Cardiff University. Her research has focused on the start and spread of the Neolithic in Britain, Ireland and north-west Europe. She has a particular research interest in Early Neolithic monumentality, especially chambered tombs, and has excavated sites in Wales, Scotland and Ireland. More recently her work has focused on the Early Neolithic of Orkney as well as Early Neolithic kinship. She is the author of The Neolithic of Britain and Ireland and Monuments in the making: raising the great dolmens in early Neolithic northern Europe (with Colin Richards).
Cunningham, Penny (Dr.)
Penny Cunningham is currently an Honorary Research Fellow within the Department of Archaeology at the University of Exeter. After completing a MA in Experimental Archaeology she went on to complete a PhD at the University of Exeter. Penny used experiments as a major methodological approach in her PhD thesis Food for thought: the exploitation of nuts in prehistoric Europe.