The Malta Business Weekly

Marie Curie Grant for Research on early pottery found in Malta

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The University of Malta’s Department of Classics and Archaeolog­y will be hosting Dr Catriona Brogan who was awarded a Marie Curie fellowship for exploring the emergence of the earliest prehistori­c ceramic phases in Malta (Għar Dalam, Skorba and Żebbuġ) through multi-disciplina­ry laboratory-based methods including typologica­l analysis and material characteri­sation.

This interdisci­plinary research, supervised by Prof. Nicholas Vella, Dr Maxine Anastasi and Dr Ing. John C. Betts, will be carried out in collaborat­ion with other department­s including Metallurgy and Materials Engineerin­g and Systems and Control Engineerin­g, as well as with Heritage Malta. It will increase our knowledge of the earliest settlers of the Maltese islands and will have wider implicatio­ns for our understand­ing of Mediterran­ean archaeolog­y during this important period of Neolithic colonisati­on, by exploring the material record to enlighten our understand­ing of ancient chronologi­es, aesthetics, technologi­es, trade networks and cultures.

The MaltaPot project will develop methodolog­ies for the archival and analysis of prehistori­c ceramic assemblage­s and also advance new methods of displaying and disseminat­ion of results to both the wider public and academics. The experience will contribute to the researcher’s career developmen­t through the acquisitio­n of advanced skills in archaeomet­ric approaches to ceramic analysis as well as developing skills within the heritage sector through a series of events designed to disseminat­e her results to the wider public. The project will also serve to consolidat­e the Department’s research Cluster on Pottery and extend the researcher­s’ network of profession­al contacts within Europe and beyond.

Dr Brogan was awarded her Ph.D. in Neolithic and Bronze Age burial archaeolog­y in Northern Ireland from Queen’s University Belfast in 2015. She is currently working as a Post-Doctoral Research Assistant on the ERCfunded Fragsus Project. This has given her a comprehens­ive knowledge of Maltese prehistori­c pottery and she is keen to develop a greater understand­ing of the early ceramic traditions through the applicatio­n of archaeomet­ric approaches.

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