“…This progression towards data science has been driven by an increase in the collation of and access to large archaeological–chronological data sets (e.g., Gajewski et al, 2011; Gayo et al, 2015; Loftus et al, 2019; Vermeersch, 2019) and geospatial “big data” (e.g., earth observations, climatic simulations) that can be utilised or transformed. One such transformation is the development of statistical frequency analysis methods (e.g., summed probability distribution [SPD]) that attempt to meaningfully summarise (Achino & Capuzzo, 2015; Ballenger & Mabry, 2011; Bluhm & Surovell, 2018; Chaput & Gajewski, 2016; Contreras & Meadows, 2014; Crema et al, 2017; Müller & Diachenko, 2019; Riris, 2018; Surovell & Brantingham, 2007) and apply these large data sets to derive human‐behavioural dynamics at regional and continental scales across all parts of the globe, including Europe (e.g., Crombe & Robinson, 2014; French & Collins, 2015; Palmisano et al, 2017; Pardo‐Gordó & Carvalho, 2020; Porčić, 2020; Reide, 2009; Shennan et al, 2013; Warden et al, 2017), the Americas (e.g., Williams et al, 2008; Gayo et al, 2015; A. Goldberg et al, 2016; McMichael & Bush, 2019; Méndez et al, 2015; Muscio & López, 2016; Peros et al, 2010; Riris & Arroyo‐Kalin, 2019; Williams et al, 2008), Asia and Australasia (Abe et al, 2016; A. A.…”