“…The current 'go-to' solution in analysing archaeological datasets dated by means of relative chronologies is to employ a suite of techniques with a shared origin in aoristic analysis. The technique was initially developed in crime science (Ratcliffe & McCullagh, 1998), and after a few early applications in the early 2000s (Johnson, 2004;Mischka, 2004), it experienced mild success within archaeology (Baxter & Cool, 2016;Brozio et al, 2019;Crema, 2012;Franconi et al, 2023;Furlan, 2017;Hinz et al, 2019;Hoebe et al, 2023;Kleijne et al, 2020;Knitter et al, 2019;Levy et al, 2022;Orton et al, 2017;Palmisano et al, 2017Palmisano et al, , 2019Pollard, 2021;Roalkvam, 2022;Romandini et al, 2020;Romanowska et al, 2021;Stoddart et al, 2019;Taelman, 2022;Verhagen et al, 2016;Yubero-G omez et al, 2016), partly aided by the development of several dedicated R packages such as aoristic, datplot, archSeries, and kairos (Frerebeau, 2022;Orton et al, 2017;Ratcliffe, 2022;Steinmann & Weissova, 2021). The conceptual idea behind aoristic analysis is not new, and it is worth noting that similar ideas were independently introduced within archaeology before and after Ratcliffe's seminal paper (e.g.…”