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Archaeology News :verified:
Archaeology News :verified:
@archaeology@mstdn.social  ·  activity timestamp 2 weeks ago

Roots of medieval migration into England uncovered by large-scale bioarchaeological study

A major new bioarchaeological study is reshaping how scholars understand migration into England during the early medieval period, showing a picture of steady, long-term movement rather than short, dramatic waves of newcomers...

More information: https://archaeologymag.com/2026/01/roots-of-medieval-migration-into-england/

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#archaeology #archeology #archaeologynews #anthropology #bioarchaeology #medieval

Roots of medieval migration into England uncovered by large-scale bioarchaeological study

A major new bioarchaeological study is reshaping how scholars understand migration into England during the early medieval period, showing a picture of steady, long-term movement rather than short, dramatic waves of newcomers. Drawing on chemical and genetic evidence from human remains, the research shows England was consistently connected to distant regions from the end of Roman rule through to the Norman Conquest...
Roots of medieval migration into England uncovered by large-scale bioarchaeological study A major new bioarchaeological study is reshaping how scholars understand migration into England during the early medieval period, showing a picture of steady, long-term movement rather than short, dramatic waves of newcomers. Drawing on chemical and genetic evidence from human remains, the research shows England was consistently connected to distant regions from the end of Roman rule through to the Norman Conquest...
Roots of medieval migration into England uncovered by large-scale bioarchaeological study A major new bioarchaeological study is reshaping how scholars understand migration into England during the early medieval period, showing a picture of steady, long-term movement rather than short, dramatic waves of newcomers. Drawing on chemical and genetic evidence from human remains, the research shows England was consistently connected to distant regions from the end of Roman rule through to the Norman Conquest...
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