I know how hard it is to photograph ancient sites. They may be interesting to look at, but it's hard to make the picture work... and make 'visual sense'. You seem to have got the lighting just right here, so we can get a real idea of the site and its significance. I bet there are a lot of archaeological people who would be interested in your work, if you could produce this kind of quality on a regular basis (or maybe this is something you do already)...
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My usual method - go to the right place at the right time and wait to see what happens - didn’t work for me yesterday (though I’m always amazed just how often it
does). I stood on a hill, lined up the shot of a small lakeland town, with lake in front and mountains behind. I knew the sun would light up the houses, and give good side-lighting on some of the peaks. But as soon as I’d set up my tripod, the clouds kinda joined together into one big cloud, and, though I waited an hour, the sun never showed again. But it wasn’t a waste of time: I have a better idea about how to get the shot next time, and I had an hour watching clouds.
On the way home I shot a petrol station with a bit of light in the sky, which will go to Alamy, and maybe make a sale or two (“sunset for the oil industry”?)...