Victor Klinkenberg Received His Phd In Near Eastern Archaeology At Leiden University In 2017. His Research Interests Include Digital Archaeology, Spatial Analysis, And Household Archaeology. Currently A Post-Doc At Leiden University, He Works As Project Manager In The ‘Setinstone’ Project And As Field Director At The Excavations Of A Chalcolithic Settlement At Palloures, Cyprus.
Key Publications: Düring, B.s., V. Klinkenberg, C. Paraskeva & E. Souter (2018) Metal Artefacts In Chalcolithic Cyprus: New Data From Western Cyprus. Mediterranean Archaeology And Archaeometry 18; Klinkenberg V. (2016) Reading Rubbish: Using Object Assemblages To Reconstruct Activities, Modes Of Deposition And Abandonment At The Late Bronze Age Dunnu Of Tell Sabi Abyad, Syria. Leiden: Nederlands Instituut Voor Het Nabije Oosten. Pihans Volume 129; Klinkenberg, V. (2015) Are We There Yet?! 3d Gis In Archaeological Research, The Case Of Tell Sabi Abyad, Syria. In: Kamermans, H., De Neef, W., Piccoli, C., Posluschny, A.g. And Scopigno, R. (Eds.): The Three Dimensions Of Archaeology. Proceedings Of The Xvii World Congress Of Uispp. Archaeopress, Oxford.
"Dr. Roos van Oosten began her academic career studying medieval history after which she began her archaeological degree that culminated in a thesis on urban archaeology. Her PhD dissertation at the University of Groningen focused on sanitation management, which she successfully defended in 2014. In 2011 she was appointed as university lecturer in urban archaeology at Leiden University. In addition to undergraduate and graduate teaching responsibilities, Roos is working on her VENI-funded project entitled ‘Challenging the paradigm of filthy and unhealthy medieval towns’.
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Carol van Driel-Murray (1950) obtained her PhD in 1987 at Amsterdam University where she taught the Archaeology of the Roman Provinces till 2012, when she joined the staff of the Faculty of Archaeology at Leiden University to teach the same subject till her retirement in 2015 and beyond.