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History in Their Bones

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History in Their Bones:

jhellden:

History in Their Bones: A diachronic, bioarchaeological study of diet, mobility and social organisation from Cambodian skeletal assemblages.

“History in Their Bones” is a multidisciplinary research venture encompassing much of Cambodia, the heartland of Mainland SE Asia, to explore the major social and cultural transformations of the past four millennia. This research would not be possible without support from the Australian Research Council.

Health, human mobility and social differentiation are fundamental to the three core archaeological issues of Mainland SE Asia - the nature of early agrarian rice growing communities, the impact of ‘Indianisation’ on the formation of the state, and the development and demise of empires.

Cambodia is especially well suited to investigate these core issues, because of its geographic location at the cross-roads of extensive cross-cultural interaction and the subsequent socio-political changes during the rise and decline of SE Asia’s most powerful state centred on Angkor.


ekaro9: Neolithic limestone mask to be auctioned by Christie’s...

archtravels: One of the cool things about Armenia is that...

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archtravels:

One of the cool things about Armenia is that obsidian is abundant, and there are all sorts of different kinds.  It can be black, clear, grey, or a brown/red color.  There are also all sorts of combinations of these, and they end up looking like tiger stripes, like the third piece from the right here.  (Note: none of these pieces are from an excavation, they are just surface pieces with no archaeological significance)

Archaeology students digging up something new from New Harmony's past

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Archaeology students digging up something new from New Harmony's past :

DENNY SIMMONS / Courier & Press
University of Southern Indiana anthropology major Whitley Draper empties a bucket of material unearthed Wednesday at the Harmonist kiln site in New Harmony, Ind. The students have unearthed a lot of old pottery fragments, mortar, bricks and even an arrowhead and pair of scissors from the nearly 200-year-old dig site.

Students attending the University of Southern Indiana’s Archaeological Field School have been toiling in the early spring heat methodically scraping away layers of dirt, trying to uncover something new in historic New Harmony.

The archaeological field school, which is now in its third year, is a five-week class with hands-on experience that provides instruction on how to use proper tools and methods to excavate archaeology sites.

Stellar Archaeology Traces Milky Way’s History

Underwater archaeology program at Michigan college

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Underwater archaeology program at Michigan college:

EMPIRE, Mich. (AP) -

“Students of underwater archaeology are coming to northern Michigan this weekend to learn the techniques and practice the craft of diving for history.

Northwestern Michigan College is hosting the Nautical Archaeology Society’s 2012 International Field School, which runs Saturday through June 17 at the Traverse City school.

College instructor Mark Holley tells the Traverse City Record-Eagle (http://bit.ly/K0KQoI ) that the students will take a wide range of courses and survey lake artifacts.

The program includes field research for students to document and survey underwater sites in the region. This year, some students will travel to Empire in the Sleeping Bear Dunes National Lakeshore to document the remains of a pier used during the region’s lumber boom.

The British-based Nautical Archaeology Society promotes underwater cultural awareness.”

Archaeology without conquest

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Archaeology without conquest :

Group that seeks to depoliticize archaeology brings schoolchildren to Jerusalem’s Independence Park, where they dig up the past - both ancient and recent.

ACCG: Archaeological Institute of America under fire on Open Access

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ACCG: Archaeological Institute of America under fire on Open Access :

/PRNewswire/ — On the point of open access, some archaeologists and independent scholars—including private collectors of ancient coins through the Ancient Coin Collectors Guild—have found common ground.  All are calling for the Archaeological Institute of America (AIA) to retract its stated position and join them in supporting Open Access. 

In November of 2011, the AIA sent a letter to the White House opposing free access to government-funded research that is paid for by US taxpayers. In the current issue of Archaeology magazine, AIA president Elizabeth Bartman takes aim at the proposed Federal Research Public Access Act of 2012. “We at the Archaeological Institute of America, along with our colleagues at the American Anthropological Association and other learned societies, have taken a stand against open access…” said Bartman.  The bill aims to assure open access to research conducted with taxpayer funding.  For details, see the Harvard Open Access Project online.

The AIA position caused a stir within its own community with vocal criticism from archaeologists.  In response to the AIA’s public stand, the Open Access Archaeology website reported that they will be removing all links to AIA materials and will cease actively promoting AIA resources. An Open Letter from the Open Archaeology Working Group appeals to the AIA leadership to retract their opposition to Open Access.  The Ancient World Online blog (AWOL) illustrates that the AIA is in fact engaged in many cases of open access—which raises questions about its opposition to the legislation at hand. 


questionableadvice: ~ The Whittier News, Thursday, September...

aboutegypt: Relief plaque showing a chick Egypt Ptolemaic...

victusinveritas: npr: Ancient typo. Supposed to be ‘KARTHAGE’...

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victusinveritas:

npr:

Ancient typo. Supposed to be ‘KARTHAGE’ but seems the stone carver got it wrong the first time around with ‘IARTHAGE.’ Check npr.org on Monday (6/4) for the start of a new series: ‘From Carthage to Cairo.’ (John Poole / NPR) (Taken with Instagram at Tunis, Tunisia)

“Ceterum censeo Iarthaginem esse delendam” just doesn’t have the same ring to it.

nordic-drifter: Koelbjerg Woman, a skeleton recovered from a...

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nordic-drifter:

Koelbjerg Woman, a skeleton recovered from a peat bog in Denmark, is the oldest body ever found in a bog. The remains date to 8000 BCE. Unlike other bog bodies, Koelbjerg Woman was not mummified because her remains ended up in open water and did not become incorporated in the bog until later. Experts believe the woman was about 25 when she died, possibly from drowning.

theancientworld: Egyptian Sheet gold finger and toe coverings,...

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theancientworld:

Egyptian Sheet gold finger and toe coverings, plus sandals, from the tomb of three minor wives of Thutmose III at Wady Gabbanat el-Qurud, circa 1479-1425 B.C.E.

On display at the Metropolitan Museum of Art.

victusinveritas: glioscarnach: This map of Ireland dates from...

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victusinveritas:

glioscarnach:

This map of Ireland dates from around 1530. It is drawn on vellum and shows Ireland as a rough quadrangular shaped island. Highly individualized buildings in bright red and blue represent the sites of principal places. Rivers are recorded but other detail is absent. It is interesting in that it shows no influence of any of the several 15th century ‘reconstructions’ of Ptolemy’s geography, nor of the Topographia of Giraldus Cambrensis. We do not know who the author is but can attribute the date to no later than 1538 as it mentions Portlester as belonging to the Earl of Kildare. The author betrays that he is much better acquainted with the English pale than with the rest of Ireland as he assigns disproportionate space to the district between Dublin and Carrickfergus along the coast.

this looks scarily like all of my sketch maps for Geography :l

Most pre-modern maps of Ireland focused on the Pale and tended to just ignore the West, because as they saw it, there was fuckall there but angry, fighty, Irish and Anglo-Irish who’d gone native…
Also, Gráinne O’Malley was fucking scary…

Wonder= Archaeology


meg—anne: Do YOU love tiny lithics?! Then IROQUOIS...

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meg—anne:

Do YOU love tiny lithics?! Then IROQUOIS ARCHAEOLOGY is the field for you!

alphacaeli: Levallois flake obtained by the preferential...

openaccessarchaeology: International Association for Obsidian...

openaccessarchaeology: IAOS Bulletin is Out (Open...

Lithic Raw Material Resources in Minnesota

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Lithic Raw Material Resources in Minnesota:

cennoreth:

Abstract. This paper provides a synthesis and overview of current knowledge concerning lithic raw material resources in Minnesota. A large part of the state is covered with glacial drift which served as a diffuse source of raw materials. Primary geological sources such as outcrops and lag deposits also served as raw material sources in some parts of the state. Three raw material resource regions are defined and described, each containing a different set of raw materials and types of raw material sources. Strategies for conducting a raw material analysis within this context are discussed, including both identifying individual materials and interpreting the significance of a lithic assemblage. A cross referenced list of raw materials found at regional sites is included.

This is Kent Bakken’s big giant paper about Minnesota lithic raw materials.  Posting this because I’m going to post some macro photographs I took of some of these materials, and I thought I’d put this up first all nice and neat like.  It’s a really interesting paper.

Edit: 2011 version here.

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