“…In archaeological projects, the application of deposit modeling has been utilized within terrestrial (e.g., Champness, ), intertidal (e.g., Krawiec, ), and marine environments (e.g., Bicket & Tizzard, ). Within a UK context, the application of deposit modeling is increasing, especially associated with developer‐funded archaeological projects (see Burton, Corcoran, Halsey, Spurr, & Burton, ; C. Carey et al, , C. Carey, Howard, Jackson, & Brown, ; and articles therein). Likewise, there are multiple examples of deposit models published internationally often to provide the wider landscape context of significant archaeological sites (e.g., Ames & Cordova, ; Ayala et al, ; Pastre, et al, ), or to advance aspects of heritage management (Amato, Ciarcia, Rossi, & Santoriello, ; Mozzi et al, ), although they can be referred to as landscape evolution models or geological models, rather than deposit models per se.…”