Oxford Journal of Archaeology

Papers
(The TQCC of Oxford Journal of Archaeology is 1. The table below lists those papers that are above that threshold based on CrossRef citation counts [max. 250 papers]. The publications cover those that have been published in the past four years, i.e., from 2021-11-01 to 2025-11-01.)
ArticleCitations
Issue Information7
A FAIENCE HEAD OF A BEARDED MALE FROM TEL ABEL BETH MAACAH: ICONOGRAPHY, TECHNOLOGY AND CONTEXT5
HOARDS IN TRANSITION: CONTEXTUALIZING THE DEPOSITION OF BRONZE VESSELS IN FINAL PALATIAL KNOSSOS5
A TRADE ROUTE FROM THE PROPONTIS TO PHRYGIA: ASSESSING THE ECONOMIC STATUS OF KIOS BETWEEN THE ARCHAIC AND THE EARLY HELLENISTIC PERIODS5
OUTSIDE THE NETWORK: FINDING ‘OTHERS’ AND THE INDIVIDUAL IN THE AEGEAN BRONZE AGE4
HOW DO YOU SOLVE A PROBLEM LIKE NAILS? A NEW, MULTI‐PERIOD METHODOLOGY AND TYPOLOGY FOR RECORDING IRON NAILS3
SECRETS OF THE DRAVA: BRONZE AGE METALWORK IN CONTINENTAL CROATIA3
CHEVAUX DE FRISEOF THE IRISH AND BRITISH ISLES3
FROM MIDDENED POTTERY TO PIT DEPOSIT: A STUDY OF TWO NEOLITHIC SITES IN NORTHUMBERLAND, UK3
3
BLOWING IN THE WIND: THE SEASONALITY OF FORAGING IN LATE BRONZE AGE CRETE3
SPECIAL BUILDINGS AT NEOLITHIC GIRMELER, NEAR TLOS IN SOUTH‐WEST ANATOLIA3
3
QURAYYAH PAINTED WARE OUTSIDE THE HEJAZ: EVIDENCE OF A COMMUNITY OF PRACTICE IN THE LATE BRONZE AND EARLY IRON AGES?3
THE EARLIEST ANATOLIAN ITEM MADE OF METEORIC IRON: AN AMULET FROM THE BODRUM KESIKSERVI EARLY BRONZE AGE I CEMETERY2
Connections to the Pompeii water supply network: artisanal and commercial establishments as places that consume water2
YOUNG HANDS AT WORK. USING FINGER IMPRESSIONS TO EXPLORE THE DEMOGRAPHIC CONSTITUTION OF EARLY AND MIDDLE BRONZE AGE POTTERY‐MAKING COMMUNITIES OF PRACTICE2
Issue Information2
LM IB PITHOI MAKERS: ROBUST AND BLENDED POTTERY PRODUCTION AT MOCHLOS2
Issue Information2
Issue Information2
RE‐SURVEY OF THE ANCHORAGE AT MARONITSAROUKKAS, CYPRUS: DEFINING AND VIEWING A LATE BRONZE AGE COASTSCAPE2
A DOG’S LIFE IN THE IRON AGE OF THE SOUTHERN LEVANT: CONNECTING THE TEXTUAL AND ARCHAEOLOGICAL EVIDENCE2
FROM FABRIC GROUPS TO CLAY RECIPES: LINKING ARCHAEOLOGICAL CONTEXTS AND CLAY STUDIES ACROSS THE LEGIO X FRETENSIS KILNWORKS, JERUSALEM1
ARCHAEOLOGY OF THE ‘IN‐BETWEEN’ IN EARLY FOURTH MILLENNIUM SARDINIA1
INSIDE OPPIDA TERRITORIES: THE LATE IRON AGE IN THE IBERIAN EASTERN MESETA (CENTRAL SPAIN)1
BALTIC AMBER IN HISPANIA DURING LATE ANTIQUITY. CONTACTS, NETWORKS AND EXCHANGE1
A LONG‐FORGOTTEN GOLD DISC FROM THE MIDDLE BRONZE AGE NECROPOLIS (KURGAN XVII), AT TRIALETI. SOUTH CAUCASUS: A NEW LOOK AT THE DISC WITH ASTRAL MOTIFS1
FINGERPRINTS ON FIGURINES FROM THONIS‐HERACLEION1
OPPIDUM VOCANT, QUIDVIS CUM VALLO ATQUE FOSSA. SOME THOUGHTS ON OPPIDA, CENTRAL PLACES, AND SOCIAL COMPLEXITY IN THE EUROPEAN IRON AGE1
1
WEIGHTS, CURRENCY BARS AND METROLOGY AT DANEBURY HILLFORT. FROM WEIGHING TO VALUE ASSESSMENT?1
1
Issue Information1
MAKING A DIFFERENCE: PALAEOLITHIC ICONOGRAPHY AS A TRAIT OF IDENTITY IN THE IBERIAN PENINSULA1
LIFE FROM DEATH: MULTI‐SPECIES FERTILITY RITUALS WITHIN A ROMANO‐BRITISH RITUAL SHAFT IN SOUTHERN ENGLAND1
BUILDING FOR THE KING: THE SASANIAN CANAL AND ROYAL GARDEN AT QAṢR‐E ŠĪRĪN, WESTERN IRAN1
EATING LIKE THE ELITE AT NEO‐PALATIAL KNOSSOS1
‘CELTIC BRITAIN’ IN PRE‐ROMAN ARCHAEOLOGY, RECONSIDERED1
UNUSUAL DEPOSITION ON BRONZE AGE AND IRON AGE SETTLEMENTS AND HILLFORTS IN THE UPPER AND MIDDLE THAMES VALLEY1
DEVELOPMENTS IN EQUID HARNESSING AND DRAUGHT IN THE ROMAN EMPIRE AND HAN CHINA: INDEPENDENT OR INTERCONNECTED?1
1
0.21326994895935