Catriona D. Gibson is a post-doctoral researcher on the project Grave Goods: Objects and Death in later Prehistoric Britain, based at the University of Reading, where she also obtained her PhD. She has worked extensively in both commercial and academic archaeology. Her research interests include exploring evidence for connectivity and mobility during later prehistory, and forging stronger links between developer-led and academic archaeology.
Kerri Cleary's research focuses on later prehistoric Ireland, with an emphasis on the archaeology, landscapes and material culture of funerary, ceremonial and settlement sites. Her most recent role was as Research Fellow on the multidisciplinary AHRC-project, Atlantic Europe in the Metal Ages: Questions of shared language.
Catherine J. Frieman is a senior lecturer in European archaeology at the Australian National University, Canberra. She is a specialist in knapped and ground-stone tools and currently has field projects in the Europe and Australia. Her research interests include the nature of archaeological inquiry, the spread and adoption of innovations, skeuomorphism, and the beginning of the Metal Ages.