Mens, Emmanuel (Dr.)
Emmanuel MENS, docteur en archéologie de l’université de Nantes en 2002, est actuellement ingénieur de Recherche au CNRS au laboratoire TRACES (UMR 5608) au sein du programme ANR MONUMEN (V. Ard et V. Mathé dir.), dont il assure la coordination de l’axe sur le mégalithisme. Spécialisé dans le mégalithisme de l’Europe atlantique (dolmens et menhirs), il analyse ces architectures à la fois comme une production technique et symbolique. La lecture complémentaire des traces de la chaine opératoire de production et du codage symbolique des parois (formes, couleur, surfaces, gravures…) sert à caractériser le projet architectural mégalithique et son fonctionnement.
Mertgens, Andreas MA (MA)
Andreas Mertgens is a research associate at the Cologne Center for eHumanities (CCeH), University of Cologne. He studied English and American Studies (B.A.) and Scholarly Editing and Documentology (M.A.) at the University of Wuppertal.
Metzner-Nebelsick, Carola (Prof. dr.)
Carola Metzner-Nebelsick is Full Professor and Chair for Pre- and Protohistoric Archaeology at the Institute of Prehistoric and Protohistoric Archaeology and the Archaeology of the Roman Provinces at the LMU Munich. She has directed several fieldwork and interdisciplinary research projects, including sites in Romania, Bavaria, Croatia, and Italy (Como). She was also co-speaker for the Munich Graduate School ‘Distant Worlds’, and PI of the LMU-based Research Unit ‘Transalpine Mobility and Cultural Transfer’. Her research interests focus on the European Bronze and Iron Ages with a wide thematic and geographical scope.
Mickleburgh, Hayley L. (Dr.)
Hayley Mickleburgh specializes in human dental wear patterns and dental pathology, with a special focus on the circum-Caribbean region. Her current PhD project “Teeth Tell Tales” combines human dental wear analysis with data from archaeology, ethnohistorical and ethnographical accounts, and modern dentistry in order to understand subsistence strategies, gender-based divisions for certain cultural practices, and the implications of these aspects of lifestyle for oral and general health.
Mills, Andy (Dr.)
Andy Mills is curator for Archaeology and World Cultures at The Hunterian. He is a world art historian, ethnohistorian and anthropologist, with specialist interests in Oceanic art, collections provenance, missionary collecting, textiles, and arms and armour, among other things; he is the co-editor, with Tom Crowley, of Weapons, Culture and the Anthropology Museum. During the project Situating Pacific Barkcloth in Time and Place, Andy’s research focused on historical change in the arts of Polynesian barkcloth, analysing the materials and processes of tapa-making, and exploring the histories of barkcloth in the world’s museums.
Miniaci, Gianluca (Dr.)
Gianluca Miniaci is Senior Researcher in Egyptology at the University of Pisa, Honorary Researcher at the Institute of Archaeology, UCL – London, and Chercheur associé at the École Pratique des Hautes Études, Paris. He has held research fellowships at the British Museum, Petrie Museum, University of Salerno, and Musée du Louvre.
Mischka, Doris (Prof. dr.)
Doris Mischka is Professor for Prehistoric Archaeology at the Friedrich-Alexander Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg. Previously, she worked at the Universities of Göttingen, Kiel, Bologna and Cologne. Her publications are devoted mainly to the Linear Pottery culture, the Funnel Beaker culture and Cucuteni-Tripyllia. She is also interested in landscape archaeology and has worked on lithics and pottery. Her most recent publications include an exhaustive study of the Neolithic burials in Flintbek (Das Neolithikum in Flintbek, Kr. Rendsburg-Eckernförde, Schleswig-Holstein. Eine feinchronologische Studie zur Besiedlungsgeschichte anhand von Gräbern, 2022), and co-editorship of a landmark introductory work on the Neolithic of Bavaria (Steinzeit in Bayern. Das Handbuch in 2 Bänden, 2023, with T. Uthmeier). Currently she conducts fieldwork in Romania.
Mens, Emmanuel (Dr.)
Emmanuel MENS, docteur en archéologie de l’université de Nantes en 2002, est actuellement ingénieur de Recherche au CNRS au laboratoire TRACES (UMR 5608) au sein du programme ANR MONUMEN (V. Ard et V. Mathé dir.), dont il assure la coordination de l’axe sur le mégalithisme. Spécialisé dans le mégalithisme de l’Europe atlantique (dolmens et menhirs), il analyse ces architectures à la fois comme une production technique et symbolique. La lecture complémentaire des traces de la chaine opératoire de production et du codage symbolique des parois (formes, couleur, surfaces, gravures…) sert à caractériser le projet architectural mégalithique et son fonctionnement.
Mertgens, Andreas MA (MA)
Andreas Mertgens is a research associate at the Cologne Center for eHumanities (CCeH), University of Cologne. He studied English and American Studies (B.A.) and Scholarly Editing and Documentology (M.A.) at the University of Wuppertal.
Metzner-Nebelsick, Carola (Prof. dr.)
Carola Metzner-Nebelsick is Full Professor and Chair for Pre- and Protohistoric Archaeology at the Institute of Prehistoric and Protohistoric Archaeology and the Archaeology of the Roman Provinces at the LMU Munich. She has directed several fieldwork and interdisciplinary research projects, including sites in Romania, Bavaria, Croatia, and Italy (Como). She was also co-speaker for the Munich Graduate School ‘Distant Worlds’, and PI of the LMU-based Research Unit ‘Transalpine Mobility and Cultural Transfer’. Her research interests focus on the European Bronze and Iron Ages with a wide thematic and geographical scope.
Mickleburgh, Hayley L. (Dr.)
Hayley Mickleburgh specializes in human dental wear patterns and dental pathology, with a special focus on the circum-Caribbean region. Her current PhD project “Teeth Tell Tales” combines human dental wear analysis with data from archaeology, ethnohistorical and ethnographical accounts, and modern dentistry in order to understand subsistence strategies, gender-based divisions for certain cultural practices, and the implications of these aspects of lifestyle for oral and general health.
Mills, Andy (Dr.)
Andy Mills is curator for Archaeology and World Cultures at The Hunterian. He is a world art historian, ethnohistorian and anthropologist, with specialist interests in Oceanic art, collections provenance, missionary collecting, textiles, and arms and armour, among other things; he is the co-editor, with Tom Crowley, of Weapons, Culture and the Anthropology Museum. During the project Situating Pacific Barkcloth in Time and Place, Andy’s research focused on historical change in the arts of Polynesian barkcloth, analysing the materials and processes of tapa-making, and exploring the histories of barkcloth in the world’s museums.
Miniaci, Gianluca (Dr.)
Gianluca Miniaci is Senior Researcher in Egyptology at the University of Pisa, Honorary Researcher at the Institute of Archaeology, UCL – London, and Chercheur associé at the École Pratique des Hautes Études, Paris. He has held research fellowships at the British Museum, Petrie Museum, University of Salerno, and Musée du Louvre.
Mischka, Doris (Prof. dr.)
Doris Mischka is Professor for Prehistoric Archaeology at the Friedrich-Alexander Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg. Previously, she worked at the Universities of Göttingen, Kiel, Bologna and Cologne. Her publications are devoted mainly to the Linear Pottery culture, the Funnel Beaker culture and Cucuteni-Tripyllia. She is also interested in landscape archaeology and has worked on lithics and pottery. Her most recent publications include an exhaustive study of the Neolithic burials in Flintbek (Das Neolithikum in Flintbek, Kr. Rendsburg-Eckernförde, Schleswig-Holstein. Eine feinchronologische Studie zur Besiedlungsgeschichte anhand von Gräbern, 2022), and co-editorship of a landmark introductory work on the Neolithic of Bavaria (Steinzeit in Bayern. Das Handbuch in 2 Bänden, 2023, with T. Uthmeier). Currently she conducts fieldwork in Romania.