News

Angela Zhang (CAS ’24) is lead author of article on Egyptian wood use

Alumna Angela Zhang (CAS '24), along with lab member Peter Kováčik and lab director Marston, are co-authors with Kathryn Bard, Professor Emerita of Archaeology and Classical Studies, on a new article: "Wood Fuel Use in the Predynastic Upper Egypt Nile Valley" in Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports. This article, based on analyses by Zhang and Kováčik of wood charcoal from two sites excavated by Bard in 1989, provides the second ever published wood charcoal analysis of Predynastic sites from the Nile Valley of Upper Egypt. BU media's The Brink previously covered Angela's research that led to this article. Congratulations to Angela on her first article!

Marston publishes open-access article in Antiquity

By John M. MarstonFebruary 11th, 2025in Publications, Research

John M. Marston and Lorenzo Castellano (UCLA) have published a new open-access article in Antiquity, titled "Climate, political economy and agriculture in first and second millennia AD Anatolia". In this article, Marston and Castellano draw on a comprehensive synthesis of published archaeobotanical data from Anatolia (modern Turkey), as well as integrated palynological and zooarchaeological evidence, to reconstruct agricultural strategies between the Roman and Ottoman periods and explore the role of political economy and climate behind observed agricultural changes.

Nicole Hultquist publishes new isotopic research in JAS

By John M. MarstonDecember 17th, 2024in News, Publications, Research

Nicole Hultquist is first author on a new article in the Journal of Archaeological Science, titled "Strontium isotopes and the geographic origins of camelids in the Virú Valley, Peru". This paper, based on her MSc research at Trent University, uses strontium isotopes to confirm that camelids (llamas and alpacas) were raised locally in coastal Peru by the Early Intermediate Period, not only imported from the Andean highlands. Other individuals show clear signatures of movement from the highlands, implying sustained trade networks between the coast and highlands. The article is available open access here. Congratulations, Nicole!

High school student Claire Mukigi completes GROW internship in EALab

By John M. MarstonSeptember 4th, 2024in News, Outreach, Research

Claire Mukigi, a rising senior at Natick High School, joined the Environmental Archaeology Laboratory as part of the BU Greater Boston Area Research Opportunities For Young Women (GROW) program, an internship that places high school students from the Boston area in BU labs for the summer, sponsored by the CAS Office of STEM Outreach & Diversity. Over the 6-week fellowship, Claire worked with PhD student Nicole Hultquist on  NSF-funded research into stable isotopes at the site of Gordion, Turkey. Claire presented her research with a poster and an elevator pitch at the culminating GROW workshop, now displayed on the GROW webpage here. Thank you, Claire, for your contribution to our research, and best of luck with your college applications!

Welcome Anne Johnakin!

By John M. MarstonAugust 20th, 2024in News

A new member of the Environmental Archaeology Laboratory is joining us this fall, Anne Johnakin, a PhD student in Anthropology. Anne comes to BU with an MSc in Archaeological Sciences from the University of Oxford and a BA in Anthropology from Dartmouth. Anne's prior work has included microbotanical and stable isotope analyses, as well as experimental archaeology. Welcome Anne!

Marston publishes new article on “finding fields”

By John M. MarstonAugust 20th, 2024in Publications, Research

Marston and collaborator Dr. Petra Vaiglova (Australian National University) have authored an article in the latest issue of the Archaeological Papers of the American Anthropological Association. This special issue, titled "Finding Fields: The Archaeology of Agricultural Landscapes", addresses methods for locating fields using archaeological methods. Marston and Vaiglova combine archaeobotanical and stable isotope analyses to illustrate how fields can be located from on-site archaeological remains in their article, "Mapping land use with integrated environmental archaeological datasets". Check out the article here!