EAMENA Project

EAMENA Project Arcadia funded project , , and recording in the Middle East and North Africa.

https://youtu.be/kUaSPa03WoM This Arcadia Foundation funded project (2015-2024) will record and make available information about archaeological sites and landscapes which are under threat across the Middle East and North Africa. The project is based in the Universities of Oxford, Leicester and Durham. The archaeological heritage of the Middle East and North Africa, which is of international signif

icance for all periods, is under increasing threat from massive and sustained population explosion, agricultural development, urban expansion, warfare, and looting. The project will use aerial photography and satellite imagery to map unrecorded and endangered archaeological sites, to a uniform standard, and will evaluate and monitor their condition. The information provided will assist with the effective protection of these sites by the relevant authorities. The use of satellite and aerial imagery is especially important for those countries where access on the ground is currently either impossible or severely restricted (e.g. Syria, Libya, Iraq and Yemen). The Middle East and North Africa contains some of the best preserved archaeology anywhere in the world. It encompasses the great river valleys of Mesopotamia (the Tigris and Euphrates) and Egypt (the Nile), the Fertile Crescent, the Cradle of Civilization, the Holy Land, the fertile coastal lands of North Africa, the desert kingdoms of Arabia and the ancient cities of Iran. These archaeological zones are also some of the most vulnerable. The sites range in date from prehistory, through the earliest civilizations, including the Persian, Greek, Roman and Islamic empires, to the modern era. We estimate, from experience gained in Jordan, Libya, Syria and Saudi Arabia, that a conservative estimate of the number of sites in ‘Arabia’ alone is in the region of 1.5 million. If this is then multiplied for the whole region, the total for the whole of the Middle East and North Africa could be as many as 3–5 million archaeological sites. Not all of these sites are currently endangered, but a significant percentage will be, and many more will come under threat. The vast majority of the sites are unrecorded and largely unknown to the relevant authorities in the countries concerned. Unlike much of western Europe where many of the sites have been ploughed, and some of the remains are buried and thus largely invisible beneath the soil, the sites in this region are (for the most part) visible on the surface and are made of stone or earth. However, the agents of destruction are much more devastating than just ploughing and are increasing: they include looting, urban expansion, road and infrastructure building and quarrying, bombing and shelling, as well as the surface clearance of immense areas for agricultural expansion, often leaving no trace of these significant sites. This project will provide the data to improve our understanding of the archaeology of the region, as well as the preservation, management and conservation of endangered archaeological sites from Iran to Mauretania, Syria to Egypt. The project is creating an open-access database to record the information about each site and its condition, in a user-friendly format. The information will be used improve the conservation of threatened sites and landscapes, and the project will create the tools and technology to access and disseminate this information rapidly. The aim is to create a network of well-trained staff (professional and voluntary) in the region, with the skills to record and manage sensitive archaeological sites and landscapes, to ensure that the cultural heritage will be better managed in the future. Director: Bill Finlayson OBE (University of Oxford)

Principal Investigator: Professor Andrew Wilson (University of Oxford)

Co-Investigators: Professor David Mattingly (Leicester University), Professor Graham Philip (Durham University)

Our Bijan Rouhani is delivering an online lecture for Council for British Research in the Levant - CBRL this Wednesday 1...
17/11/2025

Our Bijan Rouhani is delivering an online lecture for Council for British Research in the Levant - CBRL this Wednesday 19th November. Register here: 👇🏻👇🏻🔗https://us06web.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_5CFHlFXNTDuMCxgZnVSU5A #/registration

What does an ethical and sustainable future for digital heritage look like?

Join us online for “Beyond Digitisation: Towards Ethical and Sustainable Futures for Digital Heritage”, a public lecture by Dr. Bijan Rouhani, Senior Researcher at the University of Oxford’s EAMENA Project.

Dr. Rouhani will explore how digital technologies and AI are reshaping the ways we document, manage, and share cultural heritage — and how we can ensure these tools empower, rather than exclude, local communities.

🔹 Wednesday, 19 November 2025
🔹 6 PM Amman | 3 PM UK
🔹 Online (Zoom)

🔗 Register here: https://us06web.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_5CFHlFXNTDuMCxgZnVSU5A

📣Our Bijan Rouhani took part in the Digital Heritage Forum 2025, hosted by the Department of Culture and Tourism Abu Dha...
10/11/2025

📣Our Bijan Rouhani took part in the Digital Heritage Forum 2025, hosted by the Department of Culture and Tourism Abu Dhabi from 3–5 November,

🎤 He co-convened the technical session “Future of the Past: Risk Mapping, Communication, and Community Resilience” with Dr Paola Di Giuseppantonio Di Franco (University of Essex).

The panel featured experts Bernadette Devilat (University of Nottingham), Anwar Sabik (Iccrom Sharjah ), Sophie Abraham (ALIPH Foundation), and Michelle Mumbi Gathigi (Spatial Collective), for an insightful discussion on how digital technologies can deepen our understanding of risks to cultural heritage and empower communities to build preparedness and resilience.✨

🌍This year’s Forum brought together 132 speakers from 138 institutions across 48 countries, creating a truly global platform for innovation, collaboration, and exchange in digital heritage.



School of Archaeology, University of Oxford

📣📣We’re excited to share our latest paper reporting on a large-scale remote-sensing survey covering around 10,000 archae...
05/11/2025

📣📣We’re excited to share our latest paper reporting on a large-scale remote-sensing survey covering around 10,000 archaeological sites across the west Nafud region of northern Saudi Arabia and southern Jordan.

The study reveals fascinating insights into human land-use in arid landscapes, including the identification of a damaged fortified complex and associated hinterland features just south of Tabuk.

The work highlights how satellite imagery and remote-sensing technologies are transforming the way we explore and document heritage at a regional scale, revealing landscapes that were previously difficult to document through traditional fieldwork. These surveys can be used to target key areas for further investigation to help expand our understanding of how societies organised themselves in harsh desert zones, as well as providing a baseline guide for heritage management.
Read the full open-access article here 👉
🔗 https://doi.org/10.3390/heritage8110456

School of Archaeology, University of Oxford School of Archaeology and Ancient History, University of Leicester Archaeology at Durham University

☀ Recently, our EAMENA team from Archaeology at Durham University were in   working closely with our incredible colleagu...
04/11/2025

☀ Recently, our EAMENA team from Archaeology at Durham University were in working closely with our incredible colleagues from the General Directorate of Antiquities and Heritage.
Together they are developing a new national heritage database to support the protection and sustainable management of the KRI's rich cultural heritage.
📱 During the visit, they also tested the Amal in Heritage app — supported by World Monuments Fund — for recording and assessing the condition of heritage sites directly in the field.
🏛 Our team had the privilege of visiting the Erbil Citadel, a UNESCO World Heritage Site.



School of Archaeology, University of Oxford School of Archaeology and Ancient History, University of Leicester UNESCO

📣📣New Publication Alert! 'Reporting Heritage Destruction'  has just been published as an output of the Endangered Cultur...
30/10/2025

📣📣New Publication Alert! 'Reporting Heritage Destruction' has just been published as an output of the Endangered Cultural Heritage of the Global South (ECHGS) Hub, University of Oxford.

Edited by Bijan Rouhani, Bill Finlayson, and Timothy Clack, this volume explores how cultural heritage destruction is reported — asking who reports, what is reported, how, and with what consequences.

With 21 chapters across three sections and concluding with the Oxford Recommendations, the book brings together diverse voices and case studies from Africa, Asia, and the Middle East. It offers a timely reflection on the intersections of media, heritage, and human rights in contexts of conflict and crisis.

The book is available open access, and print copies can also be ordered through Archaeopress
https://www.archaeopress.com/Archaeopress/ASP/missingPageHandler.asp?404;https://archaeopress.com:443/Archaeopress/Products/9781805830382

DOI: 10.32028/9781805830382



School of Archaeology, University of Oxford School of Archaeology and Ancient History, University of Leicester Archaeology at Durham University

We’re excited to announce the launch of our new publication “Recommendations for a Cultural Heritage and Climate Change ...
29/10/2025

We’re excited to announce the launch of our new publication “Recommendations for a Cultural Heritage and Climate Change Policy in Jordan”, developed in partnership with Petra National Trust (Petra National Trust الجمعية الوطنية للمحافظة على البترا ) and funded by the UK Arts and Humanities Research Council (AHRC).

This pioneering policy proposal brings together cultural heritage and climate policy — setting a regional benchmark for sustainability and resilience.

Created through collaboration between Jordanian, Palestinian, and UK researchers, the work draws on studies from World Heritage sites including Petra, Jericho, As-Salt, and the Baptism Site. It explores how climate change intersects with traditional land management, heritage conservation, and tourism pressures, in line with UNESCO’s Policy Document on Climate Action for World Heritage.

The draft policy has been reviewed with a wide network of stakeholders from government agencies, NGOs, local authorities, World Heritage Site managers, and community representatives, ensuring they reflect diverse perspectives and on-the-ground realities.

English version:
https://zenodo.org/records/17250493

Arabic version:
https://zenodo.org/records/17306490



International Council on Monuments and Sites (ICOMOS) ICOMOS-Jordan UNESCO UNESCO Jordan Office School of Archaeology, University of Oxford QUB - School of Natural and Built Environment Queen's University Belfast
Climate Heritage Network Archaeology at Durham University School of Archaeology and Ancient History, University of Leicester UK Research and Innovation Preserving Legacies

Our team are just back from fieldwork in SE  ! They were east of Bayir looking at a series of   camps we first identifie...
08/10/2025

Our team are just back from fieldwork in SE ! They were east of Bayir looking at a series of camps we first identified on satellite imagery back in 2022. Look out for news of this survey in our future posts.

School of Archaeology, University of Oxford
Council for British Research in the Levant - CBRL
Archaeology at Durham University
School of Archaeology and Ancient History, University of Leicester
Robert Bewley

This Saturday 6th September EAMENA features on Bettany Hughes show on Channel 4 about the Nabataeans which features flig...
05/09/2025

This Saturday 6th September EAMENA features on Bettany Hughes show on Channel 4 about the Nabataeans which features flights with our Bob Bewley over the Roman camps we identified in SE Jordan.

https://www.channel4.com/programmes/bettany-hughes-lost-worlds-the-nabataeans

For our original research paper see: 👇🏻
https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/antiquity/article/lost-campaign-new-evidence-[…]ry-camps-in-northern-arabia/538421A1D1F89C6EA23F1B757D08CB91

School of Archaeology, University of Oxford
School of Archaeology and Ancient History, University of Leicester
Archaeology at Durham University

📣📣 On BBC iPlayer our Bill Finlayson and fellow archaeologists help to uncover the mystery of the hundreds of desert kit...
04/09/2025

📣📣 On BBC iPlayer our Bill Finlayson and fellow archaeologists help to uncover the mystery of the hundreds of desert kites stretching across the Arabian desert. These groups of megastructures, which are only truly visible from the air, predate the Egyptian pyramids and Stonehenge.

Watch to see who built them, for what purpose and the ingenious discovery that has shed new light on this little-known period...👇🏻👇🏻
https://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/episode/m002hf7x/the-mystery-of-the-desert-kites

School of Archaeology, University of Oxford
School of Archaeology and Ancient History, University of Leicester
Archaeology at Durham University

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