Notes
1 Amores 1997.
2 Querol 2010, 201.
3 Demonstrated in various studies (e.g. Schofield & Johnson 2006, 104–13).
4 And of Supermodernity. For these last two terms, see González-Ruibal 2016, 145.
5 Further information on tendencies in nomenclature and its chronological coverage can be found in Azkarate & Escribano-Ruiz 2014, 94–5; Montón Subias & Abejez 2015, 19–20.
6 For further information, see Azkarate & Escribano-Ruiz 2014, 94–8; Montón Subias & Abejez 2015, 21–2.
7 Such as INCIPIT (CSIC), a well-known centre for the study of the Archaeology of the Contemporary Past, the universities of Huelva and Sevilla, which have always been at the forefront of the colonial archaeology of the Americas, and GPAC at the University of the Basque Country (UPV/EHU), where many of the subject areas mentioned in this overview are brought together.
8 Sometimes collectively referred as Dayak communities: an umbrella term introduced by European colonialists describing non-Muslim, non-Malay peoples.
9 Stark 2014.
10 New Straits Times 2017; Borneo Post Online 2017.
11 Unless as components of multi-phase sites, see Chin 1977.
12 Arkitek JFN Sdn Bhd 2016, vols 1, 2, 3.
13 Kusmartono 2008; 2006.
14 Nyiri 2016.
15 e.g. Ko & Chia 2012.
16 e.g. Datan et al. 2012; Kusmartono 2008.
17 Stark 2014.
18 Lape 2005.
19 Ueda et al. 2016.
20 Lape 2002.
21 Formally known as the Bulletin of the Indo-Pacific Prehistory Association 1979–2013, e.g. Bulbeck 1989.
22 e.g. Berekoven et al. 2015.
23 Ylimaunu 2007.
24 e.g. Mullins et al. 2013; Ylimaunu et al. 2013; Herva 2014; Salmi & Kuokkanen 2014; Ylimaunu et al. 2014; Symonds et al. 2015; Äikäs et al. 2016; Ikäheimo et al. 2016.
25 Antiquities Act (295/63), National Board of Antiquities, http://www.nba.fi/en/cultural_environment/archaeological_heritage/official_protection/the_antiquities_act.
26 cf. Ylimaunu et al. 2014.
27 e.g. Herva et al. 2016; Thomas et al. 2016.
28 e.g. Seitsonen & Herva 2011; Äikäs et al. 2016; Ikäheimo et al. 2016; Herva et al. 2016; Thomas et al. 2016. See also Lapland Dark Heritage blog: http://blogs.helsinki.fi/lapland-dark-heritage/.
29 The Society for Medieval Archaeology in Finland, http://www.skas.fi/in-english/.
30 Medieval European Research Congress, https://www.e-a-a.org/EAA/EAA/Navigation_Communities/Copy_of_MERC_Organisation_and_Election.aspx.
31 Society for Historical Archaeology, https://sha.org/.
32 National Board of Antiquities, http://www.nba.fi/en/cultural_environment/archaeological_heritage/research.
33 National Board of Antiquities, http://www.nba.fi/fi/kulttuuriymparisto/arkeologinen_perinto/historiallisen_ajan_perinto/kaupungit/inventointiraportit.
34 Taivainen 2016; Metsähallitus, State Forest Enterprise, http://www.metsa.fi/web/en/samiculture.
35 Part of dissertations focused mainly on medieval and early modern periods: Harjula 2008; Immonen 2010; Majantie 2010; Hukantaival 2016. Others focused on early modern urban archaeology: Ylimaunu 2007; Nurmi 2011; Kallio-Seppä 2013; Kuokkanen 2016. Two focused on post-medieval zooarchaeology: Tourunen 2008; Puputti 2009. And two focused on the medieval and post-medieval archaeology of rural areas: Laakso 2014; Äikäs Citation2011.
36 Look Archaeology, University of Turku, http://www.utu.fi/en/units/hum/units/archaeology/research/Pages/home.aspx; Archaeology of the Seili Island Project ; Seppänen, 2012.
37 Past projects in the field of historical and post-medieval archaeology in the University of Oulu funded by the Academy of Finland or different foundations: The Material Roots of Modernization in Northern Finland c. AD 1500–1800: An Archaeological Study of Urbanization and Consumption (2004–06); Human-Animal Relationships among the Finland’s Sámi ca. 1000–1800 AD (2008–10); Material Culture and Human-Environment Relations in Early Modern Tornio (2008–10); Towns, Borders and Material Culture — Effects of Modernisation and Globalisation in the Northern Finnish Towns since the c. 15th Century (2010–12); Food and Identity in Medieval and Early Modern Urban Communities (2011–13); Immaterial and Material Aspects of Sámi Ritual Practices (2012–15). Ongoing projects in the field of historical archaeology in the University of Oulu funded by the Academy of Finland or different foundations: Emergent Consumer Society and Consumer Symbolism in Early Modern Northern Europe (2014–17); Understanding the Cultural Impacts and Issues of Lapland Mining: A Long-Term Perspective on Sustainable Mining Policies in the North (2014–18); Devotion of the Place and Memory — Changing Processes in the Early-Modern Urban Space in Finland (2015–18); Religious Contacts and Religious Changes: Interdisciplinary Investigation of Site Biographies of Sámi Ritual Places (2016–19); Human-Environmental Relationships in the Colonial Contact (2016–21); The Church, Space, and Memory (2017–19).
38 The Academy of Finland funded conflict archaeology project: Lapland’s Dark Heritage: Understanding the Cultural Legacy of Northern Finland’s WWII German Materialities within Interdisciplinary Perspectives (2014–18); Lapland Dark Heritage blog, http://blogs.helsinki.fi/lapland-dark-heritage/projektista-about-the-project/.
39 e.g. Äikäs et al. 2016; Herva 2014; Herva et al. 2016; Ikäheimo et al. 2016; Mullins et al. 2013; Salmi & Kuokkanen 2014; Salmi et al. 2014; Seitsonen & Herva 2011; Symonds et al. 2015; Thomas et al. 2016; Ylimaunu et al. 2013; 2014.
40 e.g. Kallio et al. 1994; Seppänen 2003; Kallio & Lipponen 2005.