Posts by Mark Altaweel
🚀 New! Pleased to share my new article (with C. Guerriero), “The Origins of (a Culture of) Cooperation,” now out in JLEO. We show how climate shocks and institutions shaped the emergence of cooperative norms in ancient Mesopotamia.
Read it here 👉 doi.org/10.1093/jleo... #economics #politics #econsky
new position: University Professorship in Egyptology at Freie Universität Berlin #Egyptology
Yes, the research included what I could find and other research on texts discussing irrigation practices/fallowing regimes in Mesopotamia. There are earlier studies that discuss this in detail from historical documents. We simply incorporated this in the modelling.
We just did some analyses using agent-based modelling to see how human choices affect salinity. Long story short, salinity could be managed so long as their is active monitoring, good fallowing rotation, and climate extremes minimised: discovery.ucl.ac.uk/id/eprint/14...
I share my birthday with my employer! We also share lots of same characteristics including both chsmpioning empirically based science. This shouldn't be a suprise as we are both Aquarians! Happy Birthday to us! 🥳
We are looking for a research project manager for the upcoming FORAGER ERC Synergy Project. Based at the University of York, this is an exciting opportunity to work in a team of 37 researchers from the UK, the US, Canada, Sweden, Denmark, Estonia and Japan. Join us!
jobs.york.ac.uk/vacancy/rese...
Speakers: @lilalienz4ever.bsky.social @chiara-bonacchi.bsky.social @maltaweel.bsky.social @hollywright.archaeo.social.ap.brid.gy @patymurrieta.bsky.social @maltaweel.bsky.social @rmcelreath.bsky.social @mayameme.bsky.social and Alan Blackwell!
c.org/cdVdr9r7c7
Nice to see some popular press about our work at Assur (doi.org/10.1016/j.ja...): www.labrujulaverde.com/en/2026/01/a...
Still one week to apply! Come work with us!
Our article analysing the origin of the sands underneath the Ishtar Temple as Assur is out. We demonstrate a regional (Zagros region) origin for the sands and indicate an early 3rd millennium BCE date for the temple's founding (and possibly Assur): authors.elsevier.com/sd/article/S...
Really excited that our *new paper* is finally out 🔥 This study is the first to quantitatively investigate museum visitors’ perceptions of historical analogies that compare concepts from the deep past to modern political ideas.
doi.org/10.1057/s415...
The second volume of the series “Exploring Assur” presents the results achieved at ancient Assur chiefly in its New Town, through fieldwork and analyses undertaken in 2024 by the Assur Excavation Project. Out on open access and available for purchase: www.pewe-verlag.de?page_id=3198
🚨 Job Alert 🚨
Research Fellow in Environmental Archaeology (Amazonia)
📆 Closing Date 10-Nov-2025
📲 bit.ly/475fr2U
#LocalAndGlobal
Our in-review preprint on the origin of sands used in the foundation of the Ishtar temple at Assur can be found here: papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers....
Results show sands came from near Assur along the Zagros-Lower Zab but suggesting southern Mesopotamian influence in the cult of Ishtar.
Hot off the presses! Here’s a new article that I co-authored with my Lagash Archaeological Project colleagues on a geoarchaeological study of what we believe to be evidence of hydrological warfare in the Third Millennium BCE.
onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/...
Nice to see this book out: heiup.uni-heidelberg.de/catalog/view.... We have a chapter on population and wages in the 1st mill. BCE-1st mill CE in the Near East where we demonstrate wages mostly declined during this time and converged to similar wages across the Near East for unskilled labour.
Our new work demonstrates the relationship between increased moisture and the beginning of urbanism in Mesopotamia: www.sciencedirect.com/science/arti...
Here is a two-year teaching cover at UCL Institute of Archaeology, with a focus on Quantitative Approaches and European Archaeology:
www.ucl.ac.uk/work-at-ucl/...
The National Heritage Science Forum is holding a poster session on July 10th showcasing areas related to heritage and science-based methods as applied to heritage. For those interested, see: www.heritagescienceforum.org.uk/what-we-do/2...
🚨 3rd Job Advert of the Week 🚨
Applications for a full-time (36.5 hours per week) Research Fellow @ucl.ac.uk IoA within the @erc.europa.eu Synergy project ‘MEDGREENREV: Re-thinking the “Green Revolution” in the Medieval Western Mediterranean (6th-16th centuries).
📲 bit.ly/4lso8t3
Deadline 2nd May
Dear all, please see this call for papers I am involved with. If you are interested, please consider submitting.
New palaeoclimate results from Iraq, where we demonstrate that the mid-Holocene was ancient Mesopotamia's wettest period during the Holocene, at about the time urbanism first began: www.sciencedirect.com/science/arti...
New research by an international team of researchers incl. Prof Nick Barton & Dr Stacy Carolin suggests that the #Sahara experienced wetter conditions during the African Humid Period between 8700-4300 years ago!
Remember, 'c' for 'ceiling' and 'g' for ground! #Caves scitechdaily.com/ancient-cave...
Map of the Eridu region, reconstructing the irrigation canal network in relation to the ancient Euphrates riverbed and the archaeological sites of the Eridu region. The base map is a Corona satellite image.
NEW Eridu is traditionally considered the earliest city in southern #Mesopotamia. Discovery of thousands of irrigation canals in the Eridu region provides a rare direct example of intense agricultural management in ancient Mesopotamia.
🆓 doi.org/10.15184/aqy...
🏺 #Archaeology