Mark Horton
1956
-
photo credits: Wikimedia Commons
country of citizenship: United Kingdom
languages spoken, written or signed: English
educated at: Peterhouse
occupation: anthropologist, archaeologist
award received: Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries
Mark Chatwin Horton, FSA, (born 15 February 1956) is a British maritime and historical archaeologist, television presenter, and writer. Source: Wikipedia (en)
Articles 44
-
Coastal landscape changes at Unguja Ukuu, Zanzibar: Contextualizing the archaeology of an early Islamic port of trade
-
Coring, profiling, and trenching: Archaeological field strategies for investigating the Pleistocene-Holocene-Anthropocene continuum
-
The Chronology of Kilwa Kisiwani, AD 800–1500
-
Collagen fingerprinting traces the introduction of caprines to island Eastern Africa
-
Eastern Africa and the Early Indian Ocean: Understanding Mobility in a Globalising World
-
Dairy pastoralism sustained eastern Eurasian steppe populations for 5,000 years
-
Towards a Historical Ecology of Intertidal Foraging in the Mafia Archipelago: Archaeomalacology and Implications for Marine Resource Management
-
Viking Age Repton: Strontium evidence for the mobility and identity of the charnel dead
-
Characterising marine mollusc exploitation in the eastern African Iron Age: Archaeomalacological evidence from Unguja Ukuu and Fukuchani, Zanzibar
-
Long-term Trends in Terrestrial and Marine Invertebrate Exploitation on the Eastern African Coast: Insights from Kuumbi Cave, Zanzibar
-
Early agriculture in Sri Lanka: New Archaeobotanical analyses and radiocarbon dates from the early historic sites of Kirinda and Kantharodai (Kandarodai)
-
The Swahili Corridor Revisited
-
Reconstructing Asian faunal introductions to eastern Africa from multi-proxy biomolecular and archaeological datasets
-
Reconstructing Prehistoric African Population Structure
-
Dietary Diversity on the Swahili Coast: The Fauna from Two Zanzibar Trading Locales.
-
Fiat Lux: Functional Analysis of Three Saxo-Norman Pottery Lamps from Berkeley, Gloucestershire
-
Precision farming and archaeology
-
The Mosques of Songo Mnara in their Urban Landscape
-
Ancient crops provide first archaeological signature of the westward Austronesian expansion.
-
Coastal Subsistence, Maritime Trade, and the Colonization of Small Offshore Islands in Eastern African Prehistory
-
Reinvestigation of Kuumbi Cave, Zanzibar, reveals Later Stone Age coastal habitation, early Holocene abandonment and Iron Age reoccupation
-
Zanzibar and Indian Ocean trade in the first millennium CE: the glass bead evidence
-
When Did the Swahili Become Maritime?
-
Late Quaternary speleogenesis and landscape evolution in a tropical carbonate island: Pango la Kuumbi (Kuumbi Cave), Zanzibar
-
Use of Zanzibar copal (Hymenaea verrucosa Gaertn.) as incense at Unguja Ukuu, Tanzania in the 7–8th century CE: chemical insights into trade and Indian Ocean interactions
-
Iron Age agriculture, fishing and trade in the Mafia Archipelago, Tanzania: new evidence from Ukunju Cave
-
Fishing and Fish Consumption in the Swahili Communities of East Africa, 700–1400 CE
-
A novel marine dietary indicator utilising compound-specific bone collagen amino acid δ13C values of ancient humans
-
Greville Freeman-Grenville, FSA, 1918–2005
-
Short- and long-term foraging and foddering strategies of domesticated animals from Qasr Ibrim, Egypt
-
Detection of palm fruit lipids in archaeological pottery from Qasr Ibrim, Egyptian Nubia.
-
Processing palm fruits in the Nile Valley — biomolecular evidence from Qasr Ibrim
Human - wd:Q11239584