Alessio Palmisano is an Associate Professor and quantitative archaeologist who blends bespoke computational and spatial methods with field experience to study settlement patterns, population dynamics, social inequality and long-distance cultural contacts. With over a decade in academia and research roles across UCL, Durham, LMU Munich and Exeter, he leads interdisciplinary projects and currently directs work on Assyrian governance funded by a Rita Levi Montalcini fellowship. He combines hands-on excavation experience in Syria, Turkey, Iraq and Italy with editorial stewardship as Editor-in-Chief of the Journal of Open Archaeology Data, promoting open, reproducible research. Trained at UCL and Sapienza with distinction-level degrees, he is known for translating complex theoretical questions into operational quantitative models that reveal long-term human-environment interactions.
10 years of coding experience
8 years of employment as a software developer
Master of Arts - MA, Archaeology of Near East, 110/110 cum laude, Master of Arts - MA, Archaeology of Near East, 110/110 cum laude at Sapienza Università di Roma
Dataset of 10,637 radiocarbon dates from the Near East from the Late Pleistocene until the Late Holocene (ca. 14 - 2 kya BP).
Contributions:13 releases, 147 commits, 17 PRs in 1 year 6 months
untillatedatasetradiocarbondates
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