Cavers, Graeme (Dr.)
Graeme Cavers is a director at AOC Archaeology Group in the UK. He specialises in the later prehistoric settlements of northern Britain, having completed doctoral research on the crannogs of western Scotland, and has coordinated surveys and excavations at Iron Age settlements across Scotland, including at Cults Loch and Whitefield Loch in Wigtownshire, Nybster broch in Caithness and Clachtoll broch in Assynt. He is an honorary Research Associate at the University of Edinburgh, UK.
Cecalupo, Chiara (Dr.)
Chiara Cecalupo is CONEX-Plus-Marie Curie Fellow at the Universidad Carlos III de Madrid. She received her PhD in Museology and History of Early Christian Archaeology at the Pontificio Istituto di Archeologia Cristiana in Rome. As a researcher, she collaborated with several universities and museums in Italy, Malta, Spain and other states. Her main research focus is on the rediscovery of early-Christian catacombs in the Mediterranean basin. She has a very strong record of publication in history of archaeology, antiquarian studies and reception of antiquities from the 16th to the 19th century.
Chan, Ben (Dr.)
Ben Chan is a prehistoric archaeologist and a lithics analyst focusing on all forms of techno-typological analyses and use-wear analysis. He has a particular interest in settlement archaeology and the archaeology of craft and subsistence practices. Ben has worked extensively on the Neolithic landscapes of Stonehenge, Avebury, and Orkney. He currently works at the University of Bristol having previously held a Marie Curie Intra-European fellowship at Leiden University.
Chapman, John (Prof. (em.) dr.)
John Chapman is an Emeritus Professor of European Prehistory at Durham University, where he worked for over 20 years, after moving from the Department of Archaeology of the University of Newcastle upon Tyne (1980 – 1996). He was the first Editor of the European Journal of Archaeology for the European Association of Archaeologists and Vice-President of the Prehistoric Society (UK).
Cheben, Ivan
Ivan Cheben is a Researcher at the Archaeological Institute of the Slovak Academy of Sciences in Nitra. His main research interests are material culture studies and settlement patterns of Neolithic and Copper Age periods in Central Europe. He has an extensive experience in archaeological fieldwork in Slovakia, and served as the head of rescue excavations in SW Slovakia for many years. Since 2012 he is head of the Vráble fieldwork project.
Cherry, John F. (Prof. (em.) Dr.)
John F. Cherry is Joukowsky Family Emeritus Professor of Archaeology & the Ancient World and Emeritus Professor of Classics at Brown University, having previously taught at the University of Michigan (1993–2005) and the University of Cambridge (1980–1993). His main research interests include island archaeology, Aegean and wider Mediterranean prehistory, Caribbean archaeology, regional survey, and lithic studies. He has been involved in fieldwork in Greece, the Caribbean, the UK, USA, Italy, and Armenia.
Chu, Wei (Dr.)
Wei Chu is a Palaeolithic archaeologist focussing on the late Pleistocene of Europe. His PhD focused on experimental archaeology and taphonomy. He currently leads a project focused on the early Upper Palaeolithic in East-Central Europe. He is currently appointed as assistant professor at the Faculty of Archaeology at Leiden University.
Cavers, Graeme (Dr.)
Graeme Cavers is a director at AOC Archaeology Group in the UK. He specialises in the later prehistoric settlements of northern Britain, having completed doctoral research on the crannogs of western Scotland, and has coordinated surveys and excavations at Iron Age settlements across Scotland, including at Cults Loch and Whitefield Loch in Wigtownshire, Nybster broch in Caithness and Clachtoll broch in Assynt. He is an honorary Research Associate at the University of Edinburgh, UK.
Cecalupo, Chiara (Dr.)
Chiara Cecalupo is CONEX-Plus-Marie Curie Fellow at the Universidad Carlos III de Madrid. She received her PhD in Museology and History of Early Christian Archaeology at the Pontificio Istituto di Archeologia Cristiana in Rome. As a researcher, she collaborated with several universities and museums in Italy, Malta, Spain and other states. Her main research focus is on the rediscovery of early-Christian catacombs in the Mediterranean basin. She has a very strong record of publication in history of archaeology, antiquarian studies and reception of antiquities from the 16th to the 19th century.
Chan, Ben (Dr.)
Ben Chan is a prehistoric archaeologist and a lithics analyst focusing on all forms of techno-typological analyses and use-wear analysis. He has a particular interest in settlement archaeology and the archaeology of craft and subsistence practices. Ben has worked extensively on the Neolithic landscapes of Stonehenge, Avebury, and Orkney. He currently works at the University of Bristol having previously held a Marie Curie Intra-European fellowship at Leiden University.
Chapman, John (Prof. (em.) dr.)
John Chapman is an Emeritus Professor of European Prehistory at Durham University, where he worked for over 20 years, after moving from the Department of Archaeology of the University of Newcastle upon Tyne (1980 – 1996). He was the first Editor of the European Journal of Archaeology for the European Association of Archaeologists and Vice-President of the Prehistoric Society (UK).
Cheben, Ivan
Ivan Cheben is a Researcher at the Archaeological Institute of the Slovak Academy of Sciences in Nitra. His main research interests are material culture studies and settlement patterns of Neolithic and Copper Age periods in Central Europe. He has an extensive experience in archaeological fieldwork in Slovakia, and served as the head of rescue excavations in SW Slovakia for many years. Since 2012 he is head of the Vráble fieldwork project.
Cherry, John F. (Prof. (em.) Dr.)
John F. Cherry is Joukowsky Family Emeritus Professor of Archaeology & the Ancient World and Emeritus Professor of Classics at Brown University, having previously taught at the University of Michigan (1993–2005) and the University of Cambridge (1980–1993). His main research interests include island archaeology, Aegean and wider Mediterranean prehistory, Caribbean archaeology, regional survey, and lithic studies. He has been involved in fieldwork in Greece, the Caribbean, the UK, USA, Italy, and Armenia.
Chu, Wei (Dr.)
Wei Chu is a Palaeolithic archaeologist focussing on the late Pleistocene of Europe. His PhD focused on experimental archaeology and taphonomy. He currently leads a project focused on the early Upper Palaeolithic in East-Central Europe. He is currently appointed as assistant professor at the Faculty of Archaeology at Leiden University.










