Czerniewicz, Maya von (Dr.)
Maya von Czerniewicz studied Prehistory, Social Anthropology and Geology at the University of Cologne. She obtained her PhD in 2002. After the end of an interdisciplinary project on the climatical und cultural History in the Ennedi-Mountains (Chad) and the surrounding Areas, Maya von Czerniewicz began to work as a freelancer in developing web sites for archaeological projects and small companies.
Daeli, Onesius Otenieli (Dr.)
Onesius Otenieli Daeli is an ordained Roman Catholic priest and a member of the Order of the Holy Cross (Ordo Sanctae Crucis), born in Nias, North Sumatera, Indonesia. He spent more than five years (2002 – 2008) among the Asmat people. He was participating in many aspects of the Asmat life, including rituals, traditional feasts, rural economy, and politics.
Dahm, Margit (Dr. )
Margit Dahm is a Junior Professor for German Literature of the High and Late Middle Ages at the Department of German Studies, Kiel University (present). She studied German, History, and Public Law at Kiel University. From 2013-2016, she was a PhD scholar in the DFG Graduate College “Literarische Form. Geschichte und Kultur ästhetischer Modellbildung“ at WWU Münster. She completed her PhD in 2017 at WWU Münster and was a DFG-postdoctoral fellow in 2016/17. From 2017-2021, she was a research assistant (postdoc) at the Department of German Studies, Kiel University.
Daire, Marie-Yvane (Dr.)
Marie-Yvane Daire is an archaeologist and senior researcher at the CNR’s CReAAH joint research unit (Research Center in Archaeology, Archaeosciences, History). Her research focuses on the protohistoric societies of Europe’s Atlantic seaboard. In addition to a growing interest in the exploitation of maritime and coastal resources (fishing, salt, etc.) and a conceptual approach to coastal and island societies, for several years she has been developing a diachronic analysis of the impact of environmental coastal change s and the vulnerability of coastal and island heritage through national, international and collaborative research projects (Arch-Manche, ALeRT, ALOA, etc.). She is also President of AMARAI (Association Manche Atlantique pour la Recherche Archéologique dans les Îles).
Dal Corso, Marta (Dr.)
Marta Dal Corso is a postdoctoral researcher in the field of archaeobotany and palynology, interested in the understanding of plant cultivation and use in prehistory and of the relationships between human activities and natural environments. She is currently working at the Institute for Prehistoric and Protohistoric Archaeology at Kiel University (Germany), where she has been assistant to the chair of Environmental Archaeology and taught palynology and phytolith analysis among other classes.
Dalziel, Fiona
Fiona Dalziel is Associate Professor of English Language and Translation at the Department of Linguistic and Literary Studies (DiSLL) of the University of Padova, Italy, where she teaches on the BA and MA degree programmes in Modern Languages. From 2013 to 2016 she was Head of Padova University Language Centre, where she set up the LEAP (Learning English for Academic Purposes) Project, whose aim was to provide support for lecturers teaching their content courses through English. Her research interests include: promoting metacognitive learning strategies and learner autonomy; English-medium Instruction (EMI); translanguaging in the language classroom; and the use of drama in language learning, including that of adult migrants. Together with Erika Piazzoli, she co-edited the volume “Performative Language Learning with Refugees and Migrants: Embodied Research and Practice in the Sorgente Project” (Routledge, 2024). She has been coordinator of Padova University English drama group for 25 years.
Daubney, Adam (Dr.)
Adam Daubney is the Lincolnshire Finds Liaison Officer for the British Museum’s Portable Antiquities Scheme. He has been recording archaeological objects in Lincolnshire for over fifteen years, and has a particular interest in Roman Britain, and the longer-term use of the rural landscape. Adam has a PhD from the University of Leicester, in which he explored the significance of multi-period artefact scatters in Lincolnshire.
Czerniewicz, Maya von (Dr.)
Maya von Czerniewicz studied Prehistory, Social Anthropology and Geology at the University of Cologne. She obtained her PhD in 2002. After the end of an interdisciplinary project on the climatical und cultural History in the Ennedi-Mountains (Chad) and the surrounding Areas, Maya von Czerniewicz began to work as a freelancer in developing web sites for archaeological projects and small companies.
Daeli, Onesius Otenieli (Dr.)
Onesius Otenieli Daeli is an ordained Roman Catholic priest and a member of the Order of the Holy Cross (Ordo Sanctae Crucis), born in Nias, North Sumatera, Indonesia. He spent more than five years (2002 – 2008) among the Asmat people. He was participating in many aspects of the Asmat life, including rituals, traditional feasts, rural economy, and politics.
Dahm, Margit (Dr. )
Margit Dahm is a Junior Professor for German Literature of the High and Late Middle Ages at the Department of German Studies, Kiel University (present). She studied German, History, and Public Law at Kiel University. From 2013-2016, she was a PhD scholar in the DFG Graduate College “Literarische Form. Geschichte und Kultur ästhetischer Modellbildung“ at WWU Münster. She completed her PhD in 2017 at WWU Münster and was a DFG-postdoctoral fellow in 2016/17. From 2017-2021, she was a research assistant (postdoc) at the Department of German Studies, Kiel University.
Daire, Marie-Yvane (Dr.)
Marie-Yvane Daire is an archaeologist and senior researcher at the CNR’s CReAAH joint research unit (Research Center in Archaeology, Archaeosciences, History). Her research focuses on the protohistoric societies of Europe’s Atlantic seaboard. In addition to a growing interest in the exploitation of maritime and coastal resources (fishing, salt, etc.) and a conceptual approach to coastal and island societies, for several years she has been developing a diachronic analysis of the impact of environmental coastal change s and the vulnerability of coastal and island heritage through national, international and collaborative research projects (Arch-Manche, ALeRT, ALOA, etc.). She is also President of AMARAI (Association Manche Atlantique pour la Recherche Archéologique dans les Îles).
Dal Corso, Marta (Dr.)
Marta Dal Corso is a postdoctoral researcher in the field of archaeobotany and palynology, interested in the understanding of plant cultivation and use in prehistory and of the relationships between human activities and natural environments. She is currently working at the Institute for Prehistoric and Protohistoric Archaeology at Kiel University (Germany), where she has been assistant to the chair of Environmental Archaeology and taught palynology and phytolith analysis among other classes.
Dalziel, Fiona
Fiona Dalziel is Associate Professor of English Language and Translation at the Department of Linguistic and Literary Studies (DiSLL) of the University of Padova, Italy, where she teaches on the BA and MA degree programmes in Modern Languages. From 2013 to 2016 she was Head of Padova University Language Centre, where she set up the LEAP (Learning English for Academic Purposes) Project, whose aim was to provide support for lecturers teaching their content courses through English. Her research interests include: promoting metacognitive learning strategies and learner autonomy; English-medium Instruction (EMI); translanguaging in the language classroom; and the use of drama in language learning, including that of adult migrants. Together with Erika Piazzoli, she co-edited the volume “Performative Language Learning with Refugees and Migrants: Embodied Research and Practice in the Sorgente Project” (Routledge, 2024). She has been coordinator of Padova University English drama group for 25 years.
Daubney, Adam (Dr.)
Adam Daubney is the Lincolnshire Finds Liaison Officer for the British Museum’s Portable Antiquities Scheme. He has been recording archaeological objects in Lincolnshire for over fifteen years, and has a particular interest in Roman Britain, and the longer-term use of the rural landscape. Adam has a PhD from the University of Leicester, in which he explored the significance of multi-period artefact scatters in Lincolnshire.