State of the field
State of the field
Computational approaches, methodologies, and theoretical considerations for studying seafaring have developed rapidly in recent decades. However, these approaches often remained isolated from traditional archaeological discourse, with researchers working separately from each other and practitioners, while independently developing overlapping methodologies. Researchers can struggle to contextualize their work in this complex and rapidly developing field. Therefore, those interested in engaging with this discipline for the first time need a clear entry point. As we attempt to connect with each other to create improved, cohesive methodologies, we should learn from one another’s work to define and push the field forward. It is important to understand the interdisciplinary influences that established our shared history in order to assess what challenges we currently grapple with and anticipate what lies ahead. This review of the ‘State of the Field’ aims to evaluate the origins and development of this research. With a clear reference to historical development and scope of work, we create an initial framework for the discipline of computational analyses of seafaring, exploring current trends, as well as potential and future opportunities. Through synthesis and co-operation, computational, technological, and theoretical development can help us address new challenges and further our capabilities and data production as we move towards more diverse, interdisciplinary work.
557-578
Borreggine, Marisa
556ecc66-10cd-431a-974d-7d081aa14020
Slayton, Emma
1984a9f9-2841-42e2-a910-e3e6d3e6a1c0
Bartos, Nicholas
82bd2fc9-4974-4e1e-9ec0-38fd319e1fa7
Farr, Helen
4aba646f-b279-4d7a-8795-b0ae9e772fe9
Kealy, Shimona
ea6c0b32-b8ec-41b7-ab4d-447ed6b8b8bf
Zaia, Sara
593749d8-3827-4e07-8419-458856571d81
4 August 2025
Borreggine, Marisa
556ecc66-10cd-431a-974d-7d081aa14020
Slayton, Emma
1984a9f9-2841-42e2-a910-e3e6d3e6a1c0
Bartos, Nicholas
82bd2fc9-4974-4e1e-9ec0-38fd319e1fa7
Farr, Helen
4aba646f-b279-4d7a-8795-b0ae9e772fe9
Kealy, Shimona
ea6c0b32-b8ec-41b7-ab4d-447ed6b8b8bf
Zaia, Sara
593749d8-3827-4e07-8419-458856571d81
Borreggine, Marisa, Slayton, Emma, Bartos, Nicholas, Farr, Helen, Kealy, Shimona and Zaia, Sara
(2025)
State of the field.
Journal of Maritime Archaeology, 20 (3), .
(doi:10.1007/s11457-025-09454-6).
Abstract
Computational approaches, methodologies, and theoretical considerations for studying seafaring have developed rapidly in recent decades. However, these approaches often remained isolated from traditional archaeological discourse, with researchers working separately from each other and practitioners, while independently developing overlapping methodologies. Researchers can struggle to contextualize their work in this complex and rapidly developing field. Therefore, those interested in engaging with this discipline for the first time need a clear entry point. As we attempt to connect with each other to create improved, cohesive methodologies, we should learn from one another’s work to define and push the field forward. It is important to understand the interdisciplinary influences that established our shared history in order to assess what challenges we currently grapple with and anticipate what lies ahead. This review of the ‘State of the Field’ aims to evaluate the origins and development of this research. With a clear reference to historical development and scope of work, we create an initial framework for the discipline of computational analyses of seafaring, exploring current trends, as well as potential and future opportunities. Through synthesis and co-operation, computational, technological, and theoretical development can help us address new challenges and further our capabilities and data production as we move towards more diverse, interdisciplinary work.
Text
s11457-025-09454-6
- Version of Record
More information
Accepted/In Press date: 19 June 2025
Published date: 4 August 2025
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 509096
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/509096
ISSN: 1557-2285
PURE UUID: 867ba2ff-593c-4b9e-899d-ce6503134cf2
Catalogue record
Date deposited: 11 Feb 2026 17:38
Last modified: 12 Feb 2026 02:48
Export record
Altmetrics
Contributors
Author:
Marisa Borreggine
Author:
Emma Slayton
Author:
Nicholas Bartos
Author:
Shimona Kealy
Author:
Sara Zaia
Download statistics
Downloads from ePrints over the past year. Other digital versions may also be available to download e.g. from the publisher's website.
View more statistics