Dr George Green
Qualifications:
ORCID: 0000-0001-8181-8012
Link to School of Archaeology page: Dr George Green | School of Archaeology
My research and teaching interests centre on Roman urbanism, ancient numismatics, and the economic networks that existed in the classical world. My current research uses X-ray fluorescence, laser ablation mass spectrometry, and muonic X-ray emission spectroscopy to investigate the major and trace element composition of the gold coinages of Rome and its African and Asian neighbours. The broad aim is to build a better picture of the gold supply networks that existed in these various regions and how they interacted with each other.
I am the cultural heritage research fellow at the ISIS Neutron and Muon Source. Here I help develop muon and neutron techniques to better meet the needs of the archaeological and heritage community, as well as helping this community access the scientific capability at the facility.
Projects
Principal Investigator - Making a PLASCH: Portable Laser Ablation Sampler for Cultural Heritage
Co-Lead - The Golden Empire: Geological Expedition and Analysis Programme
Principal Investigator - Determining the flow of gold across ancient Asia, Africa and Europe https://www.ashmolean.org/determining-flow-of-gold
Research Interests
Roman archaeology; Roman economy; ancient numismatics; ancient gold; particle accelerator techniques for archaeology and heritage; chemical analysis of artefacts and heritage material
Geographic areas
Roman, Aksumite, Kushan, Gupta and Sassanian Empires
Specialisations
Ancient numismatics; Roman, Aksumite, Kushan, Gupta and Sassanian gold; XRF; LA-ICP-MS; muonic X-ray emission spectroscopy; museums
Research Keywords
UG
Roman Archaeology: Cities and Settlements
Republic to Empire: 50 BC to AD 50
Imperial Culture and Society
Science-based Methods in Archaeology
FHS 4: Urbanism
Greek and Roman Coins
PG
MSc Archaeological Science – Materials Analysis
Roman Numismatics
Doctoral Supervision
Students should look for advertisements for ISIS Facility Development Studentships within our group. There is an annual studentship creation exercise each summer to create studentships to begin the following academic year. I am happy to support potential doctoral projects that combine large facility techniques with archaeology and/or heritage at these creation exercises, although students should make themselves and their research proposal known well before the summer.
Otherwise, I welcome projects that combine classical archaeology, numismatics and materials analysis.
Full Publications:
Selected Publications:
Negative muons reveal the economic chaos of Rome’s AD 68/9 Civil Wars 05 August 2022
Tracing Dacian gold in Roman aurei October 2021
Understanding Roman Gold Coinage Inside Out October 2021