Archaeology REF results

Archaeology research within the School spans the globe and the whole of human past, joining with colleagues across the University to transform the future.

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A students holds an arrow head discoverd in Sardinia, Dr Ben Russell samples a turf rampart at Vindolanda Roman fort, Dr Joanne Rowland explains her research at a public event, building a turf wall, a stone circle in Sardinia

Archaeology at Edinburgh – Interdisciplinary strength

Our research activity extends across Eurasia, Africa and the Americas, and spans the whole human past from the Stone Age up to the present day. Archaeology at Edinburgh has particular strengths in European prehistory, Mediterranean archaeology, osteoarchaeology, isotope geochemistry, coastal and marine archaeology, and cultural heritage studies. Our research is challenge-led and considers how past data and practice can inform solutions to modern problems such as climate change, health, conflict, infrastructural development, increasing urbanisation, and identity building as well as how heritage can create tangible benefits for local communities and marginalised communities. Recent growth has included recruiting staff in global challenges, computational archaeology, prehistoric Scotland as well as Heritage, Text and Data Mining. We have a strong focus on supporting Early Career Researchers.

We have a dynamic and strongly interdisciplinary research culture. This is represented in the vital contributions that Archaeology staff made to four submissions across the Arts, Humanities, and Sciences in the Research Excellence Framework (REF2021), the UK’s system for assessing the quality of research in UK higher education institutions. These include significant contributions to the REF21 profiles of Classics, History, Earth Systems, and Anthropology, all of whom are leaders in their field, sitting within the top five in the UK for breadth and quality of research (THE RP rank).

The contemporary relevance and wider societal contributions of our research is evident in the impact case studies submitted by Archaeology staff. These include the conservation and management of heritage in Egypt and how today’s sustainable construction practices can be informed by prehistoric building techniques.

Looking forward, we are expanding this focus on using the past to inform contemporary practice. The GCRF Network+ Rising from the Depths project, for example, is based in Edinburgh and co-ordinates a range of projects in eastern Africa that are using marine cultural heritage to create sustainable economic, social and cultural benefits for at-risk coastal communities. Further, Beyond Walls: Reassessing Iron Age and Roman Encounters in Northern Britain, a project aiming to transform our understanding of Rome’s impact on northern Britain, also contributes to the wider subject of cultural encounters on the edges of empires, both past, and present. 

Find out more about just two of the projects below.