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1. Archaeological science in Africa: Twenty-one papers for the twenty-first century.

2. From analysis to interpretation. A comment on the paper by Rasmussen et al. (2012).

3. Reply to Ira Rabin's Comment on our paper Rasmussen et al. (2012).

4. Visual sensing on marine robotics for the 3D documentation of Underwater Cultural Heritage: A review.

5. Neolithic long barrows were built on the margins of settlement zones as revealed by elemental soil analysis at four sites in the Czech Republic.

6. Caution! Contents were hot: Novel biomarkers to detect the heating of fatty acids in residues from pottery use.

7. Destruction by fire: Reconstructing the evidence of the 586 BCE Babylonian destruction in a monumental building in Jerusalem.

8. Crafting illusions: Human-made composite coating used to simulate amber beads in prehistoric Iberia.

9. Violent death of a warrior in the destruction of Roca Vecchia, Apulia, Italy: Insights on hostilities and Aegean connections in the Bronze Age.

10. Micro-photogrammetry and traceology: new on-site documentation approaches using portable digital microscopes.

11. Past human decision-making based on stone tool performance: Experiments to test the influence of raw material variability and edge angle design on tool function.

12. A comparative approach to GIS modelling of terrestrial mobility in archaeological sites. The iron age hillfort of Villasviejas del Tamuja as a study case.

13. Anatomy of a notch. An in-depth experimental investigation and interpretation of combat traces on Bronze Age swords.

14. Prehistoric cereal foods of southeastern Europe: An archaeobotanical exploration.

15. The warped sea of sailing: Maritime topographies of space and time for the Bronze Age eastern Mediterranean.

16. Shape as a measure of weapon standardisation: From metric to geometric morphometric analysis of the Iron Age 'Havor' lance from Southern Scandinavia.

17. Smalt: An under-recognized pigment commonly used in historical period China.

18. Revealing invisible brews: A new approach to the chemical identification of ancient beer.

19. 4D modelling of low visibility Underwater Archaeological excavations using multi-source photogrammetry in the Bulgarian Black Sea.

20. Preservation of brain material in the archaeological record: A case study in the New Zealand colonial context.

21. Copper isotopes as a means of determining regional metallurgical practices in European prehistory: A reply to Jansen.

22. A citation network analysis of lithic microwear research.

23. Prehistoric ornaments in a changing environment. An integrated approach to the Late Upper Palaeolithic and Mesolithic Columbella rustica shells from the Vlakno cave, Croatia.

24. Modelling diffusion of innovation curves using radiocarbon data.

25. The geoarchaeology of seismically triggered soft sediment deformation structures (SSDS).

26. Complicating the debate: Evaluating the potential of gas-chromatography-mass spectrometry for differentiating prehistoric aceramic tar production techniques.

27. Identification of fibers and dyes in archaeological textiles from Bazhou, Xinjiang (220-420 CE), and their Silk Road origins.

28. Integrating spatial analyses and microbotanical remains: A methodological approach for investigating plant processing activities and domestic spaces at Neolithic Çatalhöyük.

29. Gold parting, iridium and provenance of ancient silver: A reply to Pernicka.

30. Radiogenic and “stable” strontium isotopes in provenance studies: A review and first results on archaeological wood from shipwrecks.

31. Fields of conflict: A political ecology approach to land and social transformation in the colonial Andes (Cuzco, Peru).

32. Spatial thinking in archaeology: Is GIS the answer?

33. A GIS of affordances: Movement and visibility at a planned colonial town in highland Peru.

34. Significance and context in GIS-based spatial archaeology: A case study from Southeastern North America.

35. Copper for the Pharaoh: Identifying multiple metal sources for Ramesses' workshops from bronze and crucible remains.

36. Preparing the foundation for stable gilding: Scientific evaluation of the durability of Baroque gesso gilding grounds.

37. Preparing the foundation for stable gilding: Baroque craftsmen's empirical understanding of gesso gilding grounds.

38. Niche construction and optimal foraging theory in Neotropical agricultural origins: A re-evaluation in consideration of the empirical evidence.

39. Characterization of an archaeological decorated bark cloth from Agakauitai Island, Gambier archipelago, French Polynesia.

40. Unravelling ancient drilling techniques: A case of pottery repair in the Early European Neolithic.

41. Tin isotopes reveal changing patterns of tin trade, connectivity and consumption from Anatolia and Central Asia at Kültepe.

42. Chinese whispers in clay: Copying error and cultural attraction in the experimental transmission chain of anthropomorphic figurines.

43. Using ZooMS to assess archaeozoological insights and unravel human subsistence behaviour at La Viña rock shelter (northern Iberia).

44. Can we read stones? Quantifying the information loss in flintknapping.

45. Exotic treasures or local innovation: Gold and silver beads of han dynasty excavated from Nanyang City, Henan Province, central China.

46. Searching for traces of human activity in earthen floor sequences: high-resolution geoarchaeological analyses at an Early Iron Age village in Central Iberia.

47. Copper-alloy belt fittings and elite networking in Early Medieval Central Europe.

48. Fuelling the Roman salt industry. Developing a new multiproxy approach to identify peat fuel from archaeological combustion residue.

49. Unravelling technological behaviors through core reduction intensity. The case of the early Protoaurignacian assemblage from Fumane Cave.

50. Forensic toxicological analyses reveal the use of cannabis in Milano (Italy) in the 1600's.