*Please note paper submissions for the 1st ASA conference have now closed*
Presenting a poster
If you have a project or novel idea about the past that you would like to share with other students, you can submit a poster to [email protected] and it will be printed by the ASA conference organisers.
A good poster will be visually engaging and contain the key content of an idea or research. There are a large number of excellent poster templates online which can be used to generate posters for academic purposes. Posters can either be designed to present information about a topic or ask key questions about the discipline that will then provide food for thought within the conference itself.
Getting published: A number of papers and posters presented at the next ASA conference will be published in an issue of The Post Hole, The Student-Run Archaeology Journal. In your submission to us, please indicate whether you would like your paper or poster published in this issue of The Post Hole. We will then supply you with information and advice on how you can be included in the issue.
A good poster will be visually engaging and contain the key content of an idea or research. There are a large number of excellent poster templates online which can be used to generate posters for academic purposes. Posters can either be designed to present information about a topic or ask key questions about the discipline that will then provide food for thought within the conference itself.
Getting published: A number of papers and posters presented at the next ASA conference will be published in an issue of The Post Hole, The Student-Run Archaeology Journal. In your submission to us, please indicate whether you would like your paper or poster published in this issue of The Post Hole. We will then supply you with information and advice on how you can be included in the issue.
The following documents can be used to provide guidance on the structure of posters for display at the conference. Please note we are only able to print posters in A4 and A3 sizes.
Poster 1: A Novel Approach to the non-destructive identification of archaeological bones using peptide mass fingerprinting
Poster 2: Architecture of granaries in the tom of Khnumhotep II Beni Hasan