Data collection began in August 2017 and was completed by August 2019. The final sample is composed of over 600 individuals from Iceland, Norway, Denmark, Ireland, Netherlands, Germany, Scotland, and England. Crania were photographed using photogrammetry and high-quality 3D scans were produced. This methodology was chosen because upon refection at the start of the project, I decided that creating a digital archive of cranial shape would both help persevere the archaeological remains as well as allow for future research. These scans will be made open-access and freely available to other researchers.
A proof-of-concept study for this project was undertaken by an undergraduate student, Lucy Timbrell, as her dissertation project. I supervised the project and provided all data and helped with the analyses and interpretations. The project compared the shape of the temporal bone of two English archaeological populations – the Romano-British site of Poundbury, London, and the Monastic Pictish Cemetery in Portmahomack, Scotland. The aim was to determine if the shape of the temporal bone can distinguish between relatively closely related populations. The findings were positive, with the two populations being distinguished with an accuracy rate of 84.7%. This study has been published in the Journal of Archaeological Science Reports (2019: 26, 101885).
Analyses for the main papers of this project are currently being undertaken and it is estimated that the first publication (1) will be ready for submission for publication in January 2020, with the completion date of the remaining publications (2,3,4) estimated to be December 2020.
(1) ‘Who founded Iceland? A 3D analysis of cranio-facial variation to determine the role of Gaelic individuals in the founding of Iceland’
(2) ‘Anglo-Saxon Replacement or Acculturation? A 3D analysis of cranio-facial variation to identify genetic affinity of early Anglo-Saxon populations’
(3) ‘Cranial shape variation: A non-destructive alternative to DNA analyses?’
(4) 'Impact of migration and environmental transitions on human cranial variation'