Fernando Moreno-Navarro is a landscape archaeologist specializing in Roman archaeology, currently a Juan de la Cierva Research Fellow at the University of Alicante. He was previously a researcher at Roma Tre University (Italy) within the Horizon Europe project “ARGUS,” dedicated to the monitoring and protection of remote and endangered cultural heritage.
He holds a PhD in Humanities (with cum laude distinction and Extraordinary Doctoral Award) from the Universidad Carlos III de Madrid (2023), where his dissertation analyzed peasant household economies in Roman Carpetania through the application of network science and GIS. In addition, he holds a BA in History and an MA in Geographic Information Technologies (Complutense University of Madrid), and has undertaken research stays at the Spanish School of History and Archaeology in Rome (EEHAR-CSIC), Durham University, and Aarhus University.
Fernando Moreno-Navarro is a landscape archaeologist specializing in Roman archaeology, currently a Juan de la Cierva Research Fellow at the University of Alicante. He was previously a researcher at Roma Tre University (Italy) within the Horizon Europe project “ARGUS,” dedicated to the monitoring and protection of remote and endangered cultural heritage.
He holds a PhD in Humanities (with cum laude distinction and Extraordinary Doctoral Award) from the Universidad Carlos III de Madrid (2023), where his dissertation analyzed peasant household economies in Roman Carpetania through the application of network science and GIS. In addition, he holds a BA in History and an MA in Geographic Information Technologies (Complutense University of Madrid), and has undertaken research stays at the Spanish School of History and Archaeology in Rome (EEHAR-CSIC), Durham University, and Aarhus University.