Katerina Douka


Katerina Douka is an archaeological scientist whose work focuses on the spatio-temporal pattern of human dispersals and extinctions across Eurasia, including Neanderthals, Denisovans and modern Homo sapiens.

Education

Douka completed a B.Sc. in archaeological conservation at the Technological University of Athens, Greece in 2004, followed by an M.Sc. in archaeological science at the University of Oxford, U.K. Her Masters dissertation was titled Seasonality of Neanderthal Occupation at Vanguard Cave, Gibraltar. She studied for her PhD at Oxford 2006–2011. Her doctoral research involved developing of a new protocol for screening and dating carbonates using radiocarbon, the CarDS or carbon density separation method. She used this new methodology to date early shell beads from Upper Palaeolithic sites across Eurasia. This work provided a new chronology for the early arrival of modern humans in the Middle East.

Career and research

Following her Phd, Douka held a Junior Research Fellowship at Linacre College, University of Oxford, and a William Golding Junior Research Fellowship at Brasenose College, University of Oxford 2014–2018. During her Linacre fellowship she worked as a Postdoctoral Researcher on the “http://www.ahobproject.org/ AHOB3” project funded by the [Leverhulme Trust. During her Brasenose fellowship she worked as a Postdoctoral Researcher on an ERC funded project “PalaeoChron” led by Professor Tom Higham, based at the RLAHA, School of Archaeology. In 2017 she joined the Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History, Department of Archaeology, Jena, Germany, where she is Principal Investigator / Group Leader on the “FINDER” project funded by the European Research Council. She has pioneered the application of the ZooMS technique to ancient human fossils, enabling the identification of small fragments of bone on the basis of collagen proteins.
Her research has provided important insights into early human migrations, the chronology of Neanderthal extinction in Europe, and the nature and chronology of the Denisovians, another distinct branch of human evolution. Her research on early human origins was featured as a research highlight by the European Research Council in 2018, with fellow grantees Tom Higham and Svante Paabo.
She is currently an assistant editor for the journal PNAS.

Selected publications