Journal of Social Archaeology

Papers
(The TQCC of Journal of Social Archaeology is 3. 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 2021-02-01 to 2025-02-01.)
ArticleCitations
Accurate depiction of uncertainty in ancient DNA research: The case of Neandertal ancestry in Africa27
Roman provincial sexualities: Constructing the body, sexuality, and gender through erotic lamp art22
The phantom Mausoleum: Contemporary local heritages of a wonder of the ancient world in Bodrum, Turkey14
Metal burial: Understanding caching behaviour and contact material culture in Australia's NE Kimberley12
Knowing Palmyra: Mandatory production of archaeological knowledge9
Of robots and ancient mysteries: Representations of Jōmon figurines as cultural heritage and popular culture8
Assembling Islamic practice in a Swahili urban landscape, 11th–16th centuries7
Decolonising archaeology in South Africa: two decades after the National Heritage Resources Act of 19996
Archaeology of loneliness6
Reclaiming heritage and citizenship: urban pre-colonial cultural heritage management and heritage grassroots organizations in Lima, Peru6
Mountains of waste and wasted mountains: clothes, sheep and people in modernising Iceland5
Archaeology, ethnography, and geosciences reveal central role of traditional lifeways in shaping Madagascar’s dry forests5
(Re)framing built heritage through the machinic gaze4
Ancient human DNA: A history of hype (then and now)4
Esparto crafting under empire: Local technology and imperial industry in Roman Iberia4
Domestication is not an ancient moment of selection for prosociality: Insights from dogs and modern humans3
Qualia in late precolonial Pueblo rock art: An exploration of conventionalized sensorial experience in Rio Grande Style petroglyphs3
Reactivating voices of the youth in safeguarding cultural heritage in Iraq: the challenges and tools3
Events, narrative and data: why new chronologies or ethically Bayesian approaches should change how we write archaeology3
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