Archaeology Magazine's top 10 neighbors span government agencies, news publishers, TV shows, non-profits, and fellow magazines — with no single entity pulling far ahead of the rest. The highest similarity score in the set belongs to the US Department of the Interior at 0.60, and the remaining nine neighbors fall within a narrow band down to 0.58, a range of just 0.02 across the entire top 10.
The shape is flat, and the subcategory mix tells the real story. News publishers account for two of the top 10 — Law & Crime (0.60) and The Times of Israel (0.57, outside the top 10 but visible in the wider data) — while CBS Sunday Morning (0.59) and Veep (0.58) represent TV Shows. ADL (0.59) is a Non-Profit, and Discover Magazine (0.59) is the only other Magazine in the top 10. Rounding out the set are two Websites — The Hardy Report (0.58) and Pattrn (0.58) — and journalist Brian Tyler Cohen (0.58) and actor Bette Midler (0.58). Notably, only one neighbor — Discover Magazine — shares Archaeology Magazine's own subcategory.
The cross-kind spread here is the defining feature: an audience whose shape overlaps with government, non-profits, political commentary, and legacy TV as readily as it does with science publishing, suggesting a broad civic and intellectually curious profile rather than a tightly defined subject-matter niche.