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MA Archaeology
About this course
Archaeology is the study of human societies through the material remains they leave behind. Where other historical disciplines rely primarily on written records, archaeology recovers the past from objects, structures, landscapes, and biological evidence, reaching periods and communities that left no documents. It is a discipline that requires both scientific rigour and humanistic interpretation, combining techniques borrowed from geology, chemistry, biology, and physics with the interpretive frameworks of history and anthropology to reconstruct how people lived, worked, traded, believed, and died. At the University of Edinburgh, this four-year programme gives you a thorough grounding in the full range of archaeological methods and theories, from excavation and site recording to laboratory analysis of artefacts, animal bones, and plant remains. You will study key periods and regions of the past, engaging with questions about the origins of farming, the development of complex societies, the dynamics of empire, and the archaeology of more recent centuries. Edinburgh's strong research culture means you will engage with active debates in the discipline throughout your studies, and the four-year structure allows for depth of knowledge and skills development. The programme includes a year abroad, giving you experience of archaeology in a different regional or national tradition, which is valuable in an increasingly international discipline. Archaeology graduates pursue careers in professional field archaeology, working for units and consultancies that carry out archaeological investigations prior to and during development projects. Heritage management, museum curation, and roles in organisations such as Historic Environment Scotland are further pathways. Academic research and teaching draw graduates who continue to postgraduate study, and the discipline also connects to roles in conservation, cultural resource management, and development work in international contexts. The analytical and research skills developed in an archaeology degree also transfer into many non-archaeological roles, including archival work, local government, publishing, and teaching.
Syllabus & Modules
Typical curriculumStudent Satisfaction
National Student Survey - 15 respondents (75% response rate)
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