
Welcome to my website!
My past and present research focuses on the socio-economics of the production and consumption of vitreous materials in the settlements of Late Bronze Age Egypt and its neighbours. My current research project, Craft Interactions in a New Kingdom Industrial Landscape (Egypt, 1550-1069 BCE), is funded by the DFG and the AHRC and is carried out in partnership with the British Museum. I recently completed a DFG-funded research project on Amarna Site M50.14-16, the results of which were published through the Egypt Exploration Society in 2025. I gained my PhD in Egyptian Archaeology from the University of Liverpool in 2014 and have since completed a post-doctoral fellowship at the excellence cluster TOPOI in Berlin and a Marie-Skłodowska Curie Fellowship at Freie Universität Berlin.
I hold more than two decades' worth of experience in archaeological fieldwork, having worked at several sites in Egypt including leading my own fieldwork project in addition to seven years of past employment in commercial archaeology, working in the UK and France, and also in Germany.
In addition, I am a keen advocate for the use of open source GIS and its application to archaeology, having carried out spatial analysis for my PhD research and have also applied them in commercial archaeology in the UK.
Please refer to my CV for further details.
Please contact me by email. Please click here for my profile on Academia.edu, here for my profile on Researchgate.net and here for my LinkedIn profile.