I've passed my #viva (yay!) and can now share two recent publications:

First, our article on reconstructing prehistoric land cover in the Humberhead Levels is now out in Vegetation History and #Archaeobotany.

We applied the Multiple Scenario Approach to produce spatially-informed quantitative reconstructions across four #prehistoric periods, working through the complexities of #wetland-rich 'blue-green' #landscapes where #freshwater and #marine systems intersect.

https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s00334-026-01087-6

Second, I contributed to the #archaeology chapter in The Palgrave Handbook of #Anarchism (March 2026), which connects #anarchist theory and #history to contemporary political developments.

https://link.springer.com/book/9783031980299

More publications on the way as well and on to what comes next, whatever that might be (pls send me your #postdoc postings 🙏 😅 ).

#geoarchaeology #palaeoecology #gis

About the thesis, basically my PhD research challenges the myth of pristine #wilderness by revealing how England's "natural" #landscapes have been consistently shaped by human activity for 8,000 years. Using archaeological, environmental, and historical evidence, I demonstrate that effective #conservation must abandon fantasies of returning to imagined pristine states and instead work with our contemporary ecological realities. #holocene #archaeology
@NikaShilobod May I ask about the approach taken on the "rewilding" wording bandied about these days? From a Highland Scottish perspective, some aspects of conservation can be quite challenging and simplistic. (I realise your research would have been significantly broader than this one aspect, but your thinking would surely be interesting.)