Joukowsky Institute for Archaeology and the Ancient World

Zach Silvia

Postdoctoral Research Associate in Archaeology and the Ancient World (2023-2025)
Rhode Island Hall, Room 207
Office Hours Wednesdays, 2:00 pm - 4:00 pm

Biography

Zach Silvia specializes in the material culture of pre-Islamic Central Asia and the Near East during the late Iron Age, Hellenistic, and post-Hellenistic periods. He explores cultural resilience and transformation among local rural populations within periods of colonial interaction. His fieldwork is based in the Bukhara Oasis of western Uzbekistan, where he excavates rural households and increasingly explores geophysical and remote sensing approaches to ancient settlement patterning. He takes an additional research interest in the formative period of the so-called “Silk Road” and long-distance connectivity across Mesopotamia, Arabia, Iran, India, and Central Asia. He also takes a strong interest in the archaeology of postcolonialism, household archaeology, ancient epistemologies, and the reception of the ancient Near East and Central Asia in western New Religious Movements.

Before coming to Brown University in 2023, he was a Postdoctoral Researcher in Spatial Archaeometry and Lecturer in the Department of Anthropology at Dartmouth College. He holds an M.A. and Ph.D. from Bryn Mawr College and an M.Sc. from the University of Edinburgh. He holds his B.A. from the University of Rhode Island. Outside of Central Asia, Zach has undertaken fieldwork in the U.A.E., Turkey, Mexico, New Hampshire, New Mexico, and Rhode Island.

Recent News

Nature | Surprisingly high-altitude Silk Road city revealed

Article by Zachary Silvia about a Silk Road City Published in Nature

Joukowsky Institute Postdoctoral Fellow Zachary Silvia has written an article published in October 23, 2024's News and Views section of Nature about the significance of a newly discovered urban settlement located on a mountainous Uzbekistan site: "Surprisingly High-Altitude Silk Road City Revealed." Silvia explains that the study is remarkable in that it challenges previous notions of urbanism at high altitudes, as well as prompting a reimagining of the extensive scope of the Silk Road's trade routes. This project is also the first archaeological lidar survey conducted in Central Asia.

Silvia has been featured and interviewed about the discovery in the New York Times, CNN, Scientific American, Newsweek, and multiple other news outlets.
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