JC
Publications
- The maritime heritage of Yemen: A focus on traditional wooden ‘dhows’
- From Boatyard to Museum: 3D laser scanning and digital modelling of the Qatar Museums watercraft collection, Doha, Qatar
- Fear god; Fear the bogaze: The nile mouths and the navigational landscape of the medieval Nile Delta, Egypt
- Remembering the Sea: Personal and Communal Recollections of Maritime Life in Jizan and the Farasan Islands, Saudi Arabia
- The Farasan Islands, Saudi Arabia: Towards a chronology of settlement
- 3D laser scanning and modelling of the Dhow heritage for the Qatar National Museum
- A Stone Anchor from the Farasan Islands, Saudi Arabia
- When the ‘Asset’ Is Livelihood: Making Heritage with the Maritime Practitioners of Bagamoyo, Tanzania
- The Medieval Nile: Route, Navigation and Landscape in Islamic Egypt
- Boat and ship engravings at al-Zubārah, Qatar: the dāw exposed?
- The dhow's last redoubt? Vestiges of wooden boatbuilding traditions in Yemen
- Sewn boats in the Qatar Museums collection, Doha: baggāras and kettuvallams as records of a western Indian Ocean technological tradition
- Humbler Craft: Rafts of the Egyptian Nile, 17th to 20th Centuries AD
- A Saxon Fish Weir and Undated Fish Trap Frames Near Ashlett Creek, Hampshire, UK: Static Structures on a Dynamic Foreshore
- Building a Ngalawa Double-Outrigger Logboat in Bagamoyo, Tanzania: A Craftsman at his Work
- Names of Contemporary Wooden Boats of Coastal East Africa: Origins and Meanings
- The Ubiquitous hūrī: maritime archaeology, ethnography and history in the western Indian Ocean
- Ship graffiti at the Zanzibar Gereza (Old Fort), Stone Town, Unguja, Tanzania
- Egypt’s Nile-Red Sea canals: chronology, location, seasonality and function
- No easy option: Nile versus Red Sea in ancient and medieval north-south navigation
- We desire to know which is the true religion”: Inter-communal rivalry and the verdict of Nile in an episode from the History of the Patriarchs of Alexandria
- Contemporary Wooden Watercraft of the Zanzibar Channel, Tanzania: Type and Technology, Continuity and Innovation
- Iran’s last sewn boat? In search of the beach-seining āmele along the Persian Gulf coast of Hormozgan Province, Iran