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Researcher in Scientific Archaeology, University of Liverpool

I am an archaeobotanical scientist with broad interests in Quaternary palaeoecology, and plant food and wood fuel use by hunter-gatherers and the earliest farmers in Southwest Asia and Europe. I specialise in the analysis of carbonised plant macro-remains (wood charcoal, seeds, tubers, etc.) and have published on a variety of topics including the establishment of anthropogenic, managed woodlands in Neolithic Anatolia, the changing nature of pre-agricultural plant food and woodland exploitation by late Pleistocene and early Holocene hunter-gatherers, as well as on quantitative methods in archaeobotany and wood charcoal analysis, with a focus on palaeoecological applications.

Through the study of archaeological plant remains, I investigate how prehistoric hunter-gatherers made decisions, choosing what to eat, how to cook, and how they have impacted and shaped plant resources in their environments.

Experience

  • –present
    Research associate in archaeology , University of Liverpool
  • 2023–present
    Researcher, University of Algarve