Lythberg, Billie (Dr.)

Billie Lythberg has been senior research fellow at the University of Auckland Business School (NZ) since 2013, working at the junction of economics, anthropology, and history. Her research interests include Oceanic sciences, arts, and oral histories; cross-cultural theories of value, valuables, and valuation; sustainability and environmental management; and social innovation.

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MacGabhann, Donncha (Dr)

Donncha MacGabhann, has been engaged in the study of Insular manuscripts and the Book of Kells for the past fifteen years. As an independent scholar he is dedicated to communicating this research both to the academic and the wider community. His papers have been included in the proceedings of several conferences and in other publications. Prior to his academic career, he taught art and art history for many years, while exhibiting his own work widely in Ireland and abroad, receiving several major awards.

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Maeda, Osamu (Dr.)

Osamu Maeda received his BA and MA degrees from University of Tsukuba and Ph.D. from University of Manchester. He has been a researcher at University of Tsukuba since 2015 and currently is an associate professor in the archaeology course and a head of the archaeology division of the Research Center for West Asian Civilization. He is recently conducting international collaborative research as a member of the Manchester Obsidian Laboratory. His 25 years-experience of fieldworks in the Near East includes excavations of Neolithic sites by international teams in Syria, Turkey and Iraq-Kurdistan.

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Magnussen, Stefan

Stefan Magnussen studied History of Scandinavia and Schleswig-Holstein and Political Science (Modern Governance) at Kiel University and Brock University, St. Catharines, Ontario in the bachelor’s and master’s programme . From 2014 to 2017, he was a doctoral student at the interdisciplinary Graduate School “Human Development in Landscapes” at Kiel University. He currently works as a Researcher at the Chair of Medieval History at Leipzig University, where he is researching on processes of negotiations in late medieval Norway.

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Maigrot, Yolaine (Dr.)

Yolaine Maigrot is a research engineer at the CNRS (UMR 8215 Trajectoires, France). She is specialized in typological, technological and traceological study of bone, teeth & antler tools. Her research interest deals with the socio-economic processes of Neolithic societies based on the analysis of their technical systems.

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Makarewicz, Cheryl (Prof. dr.)

Cheryl Makarewicz is professor at the Institute of Prehistoric and Protohistoric Archaeology at the Christian-Albrechts Univerity in Kiel.

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Mallía-Guest, Sol

Sol Mallía-Guest is a current PhD candidate at UCD School of Archaeology, exploring the role of flint artefacts in the Irish Neolithic from a comprehensive biographical approach, merging technological and use-wear analyses. Her current research builds on her MA work (UCD, 2011) that revealed the intricate life-paths of ‘everyday’ flint tools from Irish Early Neolithic rectangular timber houses.

read more

Lythberg, Billie (Dr.)

Billie Lythberg has been senior research fellow at the University of Auckland Business School (NZ) since 2013, working at the junction of economics, anthropology, and history. Her research interests include Oceanic sciences, arts, and oral histories; cross-cultural theories of value, valuables, and valuation; sustainability and environmental management; and social innovation.

read more

MacGabhann, Donncha (Dr)

Donncha MacGabhann, has been engaged in the study of Insular manuscripts and the Book of Kells for the past fifteen years. As an independent scholar he is dedicated to communicating this research both to the academic and the wider community. His papers have been included in the proceedings of several conferences and in other publications. Prior to his academic career, he taught art and art history for many years, while exhibiting his own work widely in Ireland and abroad, receiving several major awards.

read more

Maeda, Osamu (Dr.)

Osamu Maeda received his BA and MA degrees from University of Tsukuba and Ph.D. from University of Manchester. He has been a researcher at University of Tsukuba since 2015 and currently is an associate professor in the archaeology course and a head of the archaeology division of the Research Center for West Asian Civilization. He is recently conducting international collaborative research as a member of the Manchester Obsidian Laboratory. His 25 years-experience of fieldworks in the Near East includes excavations of Neolithic sites by international teams in Syria, Turkey and Iraq-Kurdistan.

read more

Magnussen, Stefan

Stefan Magnussen studied History of Scandinavia and Schleswig-Holstein and Political Science (Modern Governance) at Kiel University and Brock University, St. Catharines, Ontario in the bachelor’s and master’s programme . From 2014 to 2017, he was a doctoral student at the interdisciplinary Graduate School “Human Development in Landscapes” at Kiel University. He currently works as a Researcher at the Chair of Medieval History at Leipzig University, where he is researching on processes of negotiations in late medieval Norway.

read more

Maigrot, Yolaine (Dr.)

Yolaine Maigrot is a research engineer at the CNRS (UMR 8215 Trajectoires, France). She is specialized in typological, technological and traceological study of bone, teeth & antler tools. Her research interest deals with the socio-economic processes of Neolithic societies based on the analysis of their technical systems.

read more

Makarewicz, Cheryl (Prof. dr.)

Cheryl Makarewicz is professor at the Institute of Prehistoric and Protohistoric Archaeology at the Christian-Albrechts Univerity in Kiel.

read more

Mallía-Guest, Sol

Sol Mallía-Guest is a current PhD candidate at UCD School of Archaeology, exploring the role of flint artefacts in the Irish Neolithic from a comprehensive biographical approach, merging technological and use-wear analyses. Her current research builds on her MA work (UCD, 2011) that revealed the intricate life-paths of ‘everyday’ flint tools from Irish Early Neolithic rectangular timber houses.

read more




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