Philippa Mary Pearce is a senior conservator at the British Museum.[1] She is particularly known for her work on coin hoards found in England and was awarded an MBE for services to metal conservation in 2018.[2] She has worked on most of the coin hoards found in recent years as part of the Treasure process.
Due to the large number of coin hoards discovered needing preliminary conservation at the British Museum, Pearce has changed metal conservation processes in order to manage the large volume of coins, particularly Roman coins.[11][12]
Pearce is the conservator for excavations at Sidon conducted by the British Museum and the Lebanese Department of Antiquities.[13] She works as a small finds and site conservator on a number of excavations including the sites of Kamenica, Butrint,[14][15] and Apollonia in Albania, and the sites of Kawa and the Northern Dongala Reach in Sudan.[1]
Publications
"We do it indoors and sitting down, but still call it archaeology – unravelling and recording blocklifted hoards" in Encounters, Excavations and Argosies: Essays for Richard Hodges eds John Mitchell, John Moreland and Bea Leal (Archaeopress 2017) 236-9[16]
"Practicable Solutions' in Festschrift for Prof Korkuti: New Directions in Albanian Archaeology eds L. Bejko and R. Hodges, International Centre for Albanian archaeology (Monograph Series No.1, Tirana, 2006) 356-367
^"Team members". www.sidonexcavation.com. Retrieved 11 June 2018.
^Richard Hodges & Anna Paterlini (1 July 2014). "A Short History of the Butrint Foundation's Conservation Programme at Butrint, Albania: 1994–2012". Conservation and Management of Archaeological Sites. 15:3-4 (3–4): 254–280. doi:10.1179/1350503314Z.00000000060. S2CID111334326.