[2] Recent research includes a volume covering documentation of tombs at Lapithos that had been excavated in the early 1900s, for which she was awarded a grant from the White Levy program.
[3] Webb received her both her BA with Honors studying Classics and Ancient History, and earned her PhD from University of Melbourne with research related to ritual in Cyprus in the Bronze Age.
[7] She has co-directed 4 excavations on Cyprus between 1990-2008,[2] and her earliest work at Marki-Alonia and Marki-Davari resulted in a publication over 350 pages with a significant number of illustrations and maps in Studies in Mediterranean Archaeology.
[11] In the 2017 Queen's Birthday Honours she was made a Member of the Order of Australia for "significant service to education, particularly to archaeology, as an academic, researcher and author, and to the community".
An application of pXRF analysis, which was published in the Journal of Archaeological Science, New Evidence for the origins of textile production in Bronze and Cyprus, published in Antiquity, and Cultural regionalism and divergent social trajectories in Early Bronze Age Cyprus, in the American Journal of Archaeology[2] Taking into account the 28 editions published in a ten year period and its availability in both English and Italian, her most popular work would be Marki Alonia: an Early and Middle Bronze Age town in Cyprus: excavations 1990-1994.