Fuchs, Katharina (Dr.)
Katharina Fuchs obtained her doctoral degree as a scholar of the Graduate School ‘Human Development in Landscapes’ in 2018 at Kiel University. Being an archaeologist and physical anthropologist by training, she has a strong interest in interdisciplinary research with a special focus on health and disease in past populations.
Furholt, Kata (Dr.)
Kata Furholt is a research fellow and lecturer at Kiel University (CAU) in Germany. Since 2021, she has been working on the XSCAPE project (ERC Synergy grant) where she studies materiality in Prehistoric Societies with special attention to burial practices and how they relate to the objects and the body in the grave context in the light of the visuospatial perception.
Furholt, Martin (Prof. Dr.)
Martin Furholt is Professor of Social Archaeology at Kiel University. His main research interests are the political dimension of social organisation in the past, and prehistoric mobility during the Neolithic and Bronze Age periods in Europe. He is currently conducting fieldwork on 6th and 5th millennium BCE Neolithic settlement in Slovakia and Serbia, and publishes papers related to the ongoing 3rd millennium migration debate in Europe.
Gandelin, Muriel (Dr.)
Muriel GANDELIN, docteur en Préhistoire récente à l’EHESS en 2007, est actuellement ingénieur, responsable d’opération à l’Institut national de recherches archéologiques préventives (Inrap) et membre de l’UMR 5608 TRACES du CNRS. Spécialiste du plein Néolithique, son travail est centré sur les questions relatives au développement de l’agriculture et à la sédentarisation des populations, notamment à travers les recherches sur les modalités qui ont conduit à l’émergence des vastes habitats ceinturés du Chasséen méridional. Elle est également spécialiste des productions céramiques du Néolithique moyen et final du Languedoc occidental.
Gates St-Pierre, Christian (Dr.)
Christian Gates St-Pierre is Assistant Professor at the Université de Montréal, Canada. His research projects are focusing on the subsistence and material culture of Pre-Contact Iroquoian societies in Northeastern North America. He has developed an expertise in the technological and functional analysis of worked bone, including microwear analysis. His research interests also include social archaeology, ethical issues, and the politics of archaeological heritage.
Gattiglia, Gabriele (Dr.)
Gabriele Gattiglia is an Associate Professor of Archaeological Methods and Theory at the University of Pisa. His fields of interest regarding Digital Archaeology (mainly Big Data, Artificial Intelligence and Open Data), Archaeological Theory, and Medieval, Postmedieval and Contemporary Archaeology. He coordinates the Winter School R for ARchaeologists, dedicated to quantitative methods in Archaeology and works at MAPPA Lab. He has coordinated the H2020 ArchAIDE Project (2016-19), aimed at the automatic recognition of archaeological potsherds through Artificial Intelligence. Currently, he participates in the FAIR (Future Artificial Intelligence Research, 2023-26) project funded by the Next Generation EU programme. He is a member of the Scientific Committee of the Computer Application in Archaeology (CAA) Association.
Gaydarska, Bisserka
Bisserka Gaydarska is an Honorary Fellow in Archaeology in the Department of Archaeology in Durham University, United Kingdom. Her major publications are Parts and wholes: fragmentation in prehistoric context (with John Chapman; Oxford: Oxbow Books, 2007) and Early urbanism in Europe: the case of the Trypillia mega-sites (author and main editor; Warsaw and Berlin: De Gruyter, 2020). Since 2019, she is co-chair of the Archaeology and Gender in Europe (AGE) Community of the European Association of Archaeologists.
Fuchs, Katharina (Dr.)
Katharina Fuchs obtained her doctoral degree as a scholar of the Graduate School ‘Human Development in Landscapes’ in 2018 at Kiel University. Being an archaeologist and physical anthropologist by training, she has a strong interest in interdisciplinary research with a special focus on health and disease in past populations.
Furholt, Kata (Dr.)
Kata Furholt is a research fellow and lecturer at Kiel University (CAU) in Germany. Since 2021, she has been working on the XSCAPE project (ERC Synergy grant) where she studies materiality in Prehistoric Societies with special attention to burial practices and how they relate to the objects and the body in the grave context in the light of the visuospatial perception.
Furholt, Martin (Prof. Dr.)
Martin Furholt is Professor of Social Archaeology at Kiel University. His main research interests are the political dimension of social organisation in the past, and prehistoric mobility during the Neolithic and Bronze Age periods in Europe. He is currently conducting fieldwork on 6th and 5th millennium BCE Neolithic settlement in Slovakia and Serbia, and publishes papers related to the ongoing 3rd millennium migration debate in Europe.
Gandelin, Muriel (Dr.)
Muriel GANDELIN, docteur en Préhistoire récente à l’EHESS en 2007, est actuellement ingénieur, responsable d’opération à l’Institut national de recherches archéologiques préventives (Inrap) et membre de l’UMR 5608 TRACES du CNRS. Spécialiste du plein Néolithique, son travail est centré sur les questions relatives au développement de l’agriculture et à la sédentarisation des populations, notamment à travers les recherches sur les modalités qui ont conduit à l’émergence des vastes habitats ceinturés du Chasséen méridional. Elle est également spécialiste des productions céramiques du Néolithique moyen et final du Languedoc occidental.
Gates St-Pierre, Christian (Dr.)
Christian Gates St-Pierre is Assistant Professor at the Université de Montréal, Canada. His research projects are focusing on the subsistence and material culture of Pre-Contact Iroquoian societies in Northeastern North America. He has developed an expertise in the technological and functional analysis of worked bone, including microwear analysis. His research interests also include social archaeology, ethical issues, and the politics of archaeological heritage.
Gattiglia, Gabriele (Dr.)
Gabriele Gattiglia is an Associate Professor of Archaeological Methods and Theory at the University of Pisa. His fields of interest regarding Digital Archaeology (mainly Big Data, Artificial Intelligence and Open Data), Archaeological Theory, and Medieval, Postmedieval and Contemporary Archaeology. He coordinates the Winter School R for ARchaeologists, dedicated to quantitative methods in Archaeology and works at MAPPA Lab. He has coordinated the H2020 ArchAIDE Project (2016-19), aimed at the automatic recognition of archaeological potsherds through Artificial Intelligence. Currently, he participates in the FAIR (Future Artificial Intelligence Research, 2023-26) project funded by the Next Generation EU programme. He is a member of the Scientific Committee of the Computer Application in Archaeology (CAA) Association.
Gaydarska, Bisserka
Bisserka Gaydarska is an Honorary Fellow in Archaeology in the Department of Archaeology in Durham University, United Kingdom. Her major publications are Parts and wholes: fragmentation in prehistoric context (with John Chapman; Oxford: Oxbow Books, 2007) and Early urbanism in Europe: the case of the Trypillia mega-sites (author and main editor; Warsaw and Berlin: De Gruyter, 2020). Since 2019, she is co-chair of the Archaeology and Gender in Europe (AGE) Community of the European Association of Archaeologists.