All Stories

  1. Training and Collaboration in African Archaeology
  2. “Unless we Value the Intangible Heritage, the Tangible will never be Safe!” Linking the Tangible and Intangible Aspects of Heritage Sites in Africa
  3. They know more than we do, yet we appreciate them less than they deserve: Decoding local ontologies in heritage interpretation and preservation in Southern Tanzania
  4. Fishing Songs from Kilwa Kisiwani, Tanzania: A Case Study of Intangible Maritime Cultural Heritage on the Swahili Coast
  5. Historical Archaeology in Tropical Africa: Revolutionary Practices
  6. When the ‘Asset’ Is Livelihood: Making Heritage with the Maritime Practitioners of Bagamoyo, Tanzania
  7. Names of Contemporary Wooden Boats of Coastal East Africa: Origins and Meanings
  8. Building a Ngalawa Double-Outrigger Logboat in Bagamoyo, Tanzania: A Craftsman at his Work
  9. Curious Travellers: Using Web-Scraped and Crowd-Sourced Imagery in Support of Heritage Under Threat
  10. Usable Pasts Forum: UNESCO and Heritage Tourism in Africa
  11. Contemporary Wooden Watercraft of the Zanzibar Channel, Tanzania: Type and Technology, Continuity and Innovation
  12. Is there Hope for Heritage in Former British Colonies in Eastern Africa? A View from Tanzania
  13. Community Based Heritage in Africa: Unravelling Local Research and Development Initiatives, written by Peter R. Schmidt
  14. Methodological Approaches to Researching Maritime and Underwater Cultural Heritage Along the Swahili Coast in Tanzania
  15. Music as a way of communicating research outputs
  16. Valuing the Swahili Cultural Heritage: A Maritime Cultural Ecosystem Services Study from Kilwa, Tanzania
  17. Stephanie Wynne-Jones and Adria LaViolette (Eds.): The Swahili World
  18. Local people’s interpretations of the hominin footprints at Laetoli, Tanzania
  19. Settlement history of the islands on the Pangani River, northeastern Tanzania
  20. The Impact of Small-Scale Development Projects on Archaeological Heritage in Africa: The Tanzanian Experience
  21. Challenges to the retention of the integrity of World Heritage Sites in Africa: the case of Kilwa Kisiwani and Songo Mnara, Tanzania
  22. When Did the Swahili Become Maritime? A Reply to Jeffrey Fleisher et al. (2015)
  23. New footprints from Laetoli (Tanzania) provide evidence for marked body size variation in early hominins
  24. Why Land Here?
  25. A history of conservation of built heritage sites of the Swahili Coast in Tanzania
  26. Shipwreck Evidence from Kilwa, Tanzania
  27. Potsherds Coated with Lime Mortar Along the East African Coast: Their Origin and Significance
  28. Equatorial eastern Africa: Quaternary climate change and variability