25/03/2026
We have been rising fast in the QS global subject league tables. Archaeology at Exeter is now 34th in the World.
Visit our website to see full details of our programmes
25/03/2026
We have been rising fast in the QS global subject league tables. Archaeology at Exeter is now 34th in the World.
22/12/2025
Merry Christmas!
02/12/2025
Our 'Medieval Warhorse' book has also been nominated for Current Archaeology Book of the Year. Additionally, Oliver Creighton's 'From Bayeux to Bosham' research project has been nominated in the project category. Winners to be decided by public vote.
Please vote here:
Archaeology Awards Voting - Current Archaeology Voting has now opened for the Current Archaeology Awards! Which people, projects and publications deserve recognition?
Great to see that the Medieval Warhorse book, derived from Oliver Creighton and Alan Outram's AHRC Warhorse project, has been listed as one of the Books of the Year in the December issue of History Today
https://www.liverpooluniversitypress.co.uk/doi/book/10.3828/9781836243359
28/11/2025
A great turnout to Prof Alex Pryor's (birthday) talk on 'Hunters of Giants: How to kill an Upper Palaeolithic mammoth, revealed by stable isotopes and DNA'. Part of our Centre for Human-Animal-Environment Bioarchaeology (HumAnE) series of events, to which all are welcome!
15/11/2025
Our ancient dog research is getting some good coverage in the news. This BBC article covers both Carly Ameen's morphometric work and another genetic paper, out in Science the same day, involving Alan Outram, that showed how prehistoric people migrated together with their dogs.
Our dogs' diversity can be traced back to the Stone Age A new study suggests their physical transformation began much earlier than we previously thought.
14/11/2025
Just out in the journal Science, Carly Ameen and colleagues show that there was extensive dog diversity millennia before modern breeding practices.
Extensive dog diversity millennia before modern breeding practices A groundbreaking archaeological study has revealed when domestic dogs first began to show the remarkable diversity that characterises them today. By applying cutting-edge shape analysis to hundreds of archaeological specimens spanning tens of thousands of
05/11/2025
We have a fixed-term teaching post available in the fields of human osteology, forensic anthropology and/or zooarchaeology.
Associate Lecturer in Archaeology (Education and Scholarship) at University of Exeter An academic position as a Associate Lecturer in Archaeology (Education and Scholarship) is being advertised on jobs.ac.uk. Click now to find more details and explore additional academic job opportunities.
05/11/2025
Congratulations Dr Aaron Deter-Wolf, a PhD by publication student based in the US, who successfully passed his viva yesterday. Aaron is one of the world’s leading experts on ancient tattoos, and his PhD was titled ‘Investigating the methods and material culture of tattooing in archaeological societies’. His work was recently featured in National Geographic magazine and he runs a hugely popular Instagram account which is well-worth following.
Congrats to our post-doc Joe Hirst on his new paper out today: 'Modelling Maize Agriculture by the Pre-Columbian Casarabe Culture of Amazonian Bolivia: An Agent-Based Approach', in the Journal of Artificial Societies and Social Simulation:
https://www.jasss.org/JASSS.html
29/10/2025
A new forensic ecology consultancy is being launched by the University of Exeter. Based within Archaeology, ApEx Forensics will draw upon academic expertise across a broad range of fields to provide one of the first commercial services of its kind within in UK Higher Education.
https://news.exeter.ac.uk/faculty-of-humanities-arts-and-social-sciences/archaeology-and-history/university-of-exeter-to-launch-cutting-edge-forensic-ecology-consultancy/