From Time Capsules to Networks: New Light on Roman Shipwrecks in the Maritime EconomyOctober 2017 (121.4) ArticleBy Justin Leidwanger
Cretan Pottery in the Levant in the Fifth and Fourth Centuries B.C.E. and Its Historical ImplicationsOctober 2017 (121.4) ArticleOpen AccessBy Ayelet Gilboa, Yiftah Shalev, Gunnar Lehmann, Hans Mommsen, Brice Erickson, Eleni Nodarou and David Ben-Shlomo
From Formal to Technical Styles: Production Challenges and Economic Implications of Changing Tableware Styles in Roman to Late Antique SagalassosJanuary 2017 (121.1) ArticleBy Elizabeth A. Murphy and Jeroen Poblome
The Docimium Marbles of the Sculptures of the Grotto of Tiberius at SperlongaJuly 2015 (119.3) ArticleBy Matthias Bruno, Donato Attanasio and Walter Prochaska
A Preliminary Report on a Coastal and Underwater Survey in the Area of Jeddah, Saudi ArabiaJanuary 2015 (119.1) Field ReportBy Ralph K. Pedersen
Africa in the Roman Empire: Connectivity, the Economy, and Artificial Port StructuresOctober 2014 (118.4) ArticleBy David L. Stone
“Minding the Gap”: Against the Gaps. The Early Bronze Age and the Transition to the Middle Bronze Age in the Northern and Eastern Aegean/Western AnatoliaOctober 2013 (117.4) ForumOpen AccessBy Ourania Kouka
“Minding the Gap”: Reexamining the Early Cycladic III “Gap” from the Perspective of Crete. A Regional Approach to Relative Chronology, Networks, and Complexity in the Late Prepalatial PeriodOctober 2013 (117.4) ForumOpen AccessBy Thomas M. Brogan
Trading, the Longboat, and Cultural Interaction in the Aegean During the Late Fourth Millennium B.C.E.: The View from Kephala Petras, East CreteJuly 2013 (117.3) ArticleBy Yiannis Papadatos and Peter Tomkins