The Type of Person It Takes To Unionize - CRMArch 177
As a response to some recent conversations in social media the CRM Arch podcast crew welcomes new co-host Heather McDaniel to discuss what it takes to create a union. What skills would those people need? Is it possible? We also talk about some site form recording issues and what the word “historic” means.
Follow Our Panelists On Twitter
Bill @succinctbill; Doug @openaccessarch; Stephen @processarch; Bill A. @archaeothoughts; Chris W @Archeowebby, @DIGTECHLLC, and @ArchPodNet
Blogs:
Bill White: Succinct Research
Doug Rocks-MacQueen: Doug’s Archaeology
Stephen Wagner: Process - Opinions on Doing Archaeology
Chris Webster: Random Acts of Science
Affiliates
Indigenous Archaeology as Practice - HeVo 35
On today’s episode Jessica hosts Dr. Kisha Supernant (Métis), Associate Professor of Anthropology at the University of Alberta. You may remember Dr. Supernant from Heritage Voices Episode 30 on Cultural Landscapes. Dr. Supernant talks about how the indigenous experience in Canada differs from that in the US, including the Truth and Reconciliation Commission. We also talk about Métis identity and how it has been largely misunderstood. Finally, we talk about archaeology and identity, the real and complicated consequences of archaeology, and how to do archaeology right no matter the location and associated communities by working through an Archaeologies of the Heart approach.
Links
Calls to Action: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLtM2eRHIW81qCCwT3tJ2nFPpRCsDAhcCQ
Executive Summary: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vW4lQfOfl3I&list=PLxPr_RIsvg9JJWoiRx2kl2v24r_pu7JbR
Tohono O’odham Nation Border Video- https://www.youtube.com/watch?time_continue=5&v=QChXZVXVLKo&fbclid=IwAR09y8voKsx923Ln6y6EZUoK2njf4VxBHUefe4BDLFJnrWziCnOvv5l4kjc
Contact
Jessica
Lyle
Affiliates
The Prehistoric Japanese - The Dirt 69
This week, it’s a sponsored episode (thanks Elizabeth!) and part one in a two-part series on ancient Japan. This week—the Jomon, prehistoric Japanese hunter-gatherers, and their descendants, the Ainu indigenous people. Also, some bears.
Links
Contact
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The Tools That We Use: Word Processors- ArchaeoTech 116
We think of archaeologists' main activity as digging. But anybody who's ever done archaeology can tell you that, regardless of what kind of archaeology we do, writing is a far more important skill. Here on the ArchaeoTech Podcast we talk a lot about the tools that we use in the field, but we don't talk so much about the tools that we use to assemble our thoughts when the fieldwork is over. So today we'll dig into a class of often overlooked tools that we all rely on: word processors.
Links
App of the Day
Webby: State Lines
Paul: TP Link Deco
Contact
Chris Webster
Twitter: @archeowebby
Paul Zimmerman
Twitter: @lugal
Email: paul@lugal.com
Affiliates
Dealing with the Devil: The Ritual Protection of Buildings Against Evil with James Wright - Arch and Ale 27
Archaeology and Ale is a monthly series of talks presented by Archaeology in the City, part of the University of Sheffield Archaeology Department’s outreach programme. In this talk, Archaeology in the City proudly presents - James Wright on *“Dealing with the Devil: The Ritual Protection of Buildings Against Evil”* This talk took place on Thursday, October 25th, 2019 at the Red Deer in Sheffield.
James Wright is an expert in recording and analysing historic standing buildings. He specialises in medieval and early modern buildings, vernacular architecture and the study of architectural fragments. In this episode, James teaches us about his work documenting ritual marks at historic structures and explains how these marks were used to protect against demons, devils, and other evildoers.
For more information about Archaeology in the City’s events and opportunities to get involved, please email archaeologyinthecity@sheffield.ac.uk or visit our website at archinthecity.wordpress.com. You can also find us on Twitter (@archinthecity), Instagram (@archaeointhecity), or Facebook (@archinthecity)
**Content Warning: Listener discretion is advised as there is adult language**
Affiliates
The Modern Myth of Turkey with Arie Akkermans - Modern Myth - Episode 6
Archaeology is not just about buried treasure, post-excavation analysis or even what issues exist in modern academia. Sometimes in order for us to understand where we are, we must walk in someone else’s shoes or hear from their perspective. This month’s Modern Myth Episode, I speak with Arie Akkermans, art critic, lecturer and expert in classical Greek history. Arie lives in Turkey, on the Princes Islands and gives us an ear to the ground with respect to the modern and present conflicts in the middle east as well as the way in which history plays a role in justifying aggression as well as its effect on the culture of Istanbul.
Nationalism is not confined to any one country and Arie speaks frankly on the ways in which Turkey has developed a layer of history that separates out what is focused on and what is discarded in the minds of the general public. Its not all serious though, we do have a wonderful interjection by Arie’ two cats, and he explains what it is like to be a cat in Istanbull.
Arie writes for Hyperallergic and The Mantle, please see links for more of his work
He is on Twitter @byzantinologue
Host Tristan is @Anarchaeologist
Follow the Network on @ArchPodNet
5 YEAR ANNIVERSARY OF THE PODCAST NETWORK – DEC 2019 – Stay Tuned for extra content!
Music – Danny Boyle (Modern Rome, Adam Grant & Open Doors)
Links
Links
Contact
Tristan
tristan@archaeologypodcastnetwork.com
It's A Wash - The Dirt 68
This week, Anna and Amber decided to clean up their act and take a look at the history of bathing and hygiene. We’re dipping our toes into Roman baths, sweating through Finnish and Russian saunas, discussing the shrewd marketing behind the “Halitosis Effect,” and more. Plus, what even IS soap, anyway?
Links
A natural history of hygiene (Canadian Journal of Infectious Diseases and Medical Microbiology)
The First Soap - The first recorded evidence of soap making (Soap History)
Out of the Vapors: A Social and Architectural History of Bathhouse Row
More Than a Bath: An Examination of Japanese Bathing Culture (Claremont Colleges)
Dip into the history of the Japanese 'system bath' (Japan Times)
Networking Naked With Finland's Diplomatic Sauna Society (The Atlantic)
A `working' bath: Finland's answer to negotiations. SAUNA DIPLOMACY (Christian Science Monitor)
The Standard Guide to Global Bathing Cultures (Standard Hotels)
The History and Science Behind Your Terrible Breath (Smithsonian)
Fighting bad breath -- a battle through centuries (Los Angeles Times)
Who invented the toothbrush and when was it invented? (Library of Congress)
Contact
Affiliates
Contact
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October Bonus Episode - Deep Cuts - The Dirt 67b
Deep cuts from October Episodes
Contact
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That's So Raven with Raven DaSilva - Ruins 9
On this episode of A Life In Ruins Podcast, we revert to our previous format and interview Raven DaSilva! We found Raven through her Instagram/Youtube account (@digitwithraven and YouTube Channel "Dig it With Raven") and really enjoyed how she communicated to the public. Naturally, we had to have her on the show! This wide-ranging interview covers topics like ways to make Connor shut-up, Indiana Jones, science communication and post-graduate degree life. Give this episode a listen and mosey on over to her instagram and YouTube channel!
Contact
Instagram: @alifeinruinspodcast
Facebook: @alifeinruinspodcast
Affiliates
The History of Faroese Lace - Hist Yarn S1E6
In the first half of this episode we delve into the history, construction methods, and traditional stitches used in Faroese Lace knitting. Then, we’ll discuss finishing up the Zetland shawl!
Links
To get your copy of the pattern, and knit-a-long head over to Rachel’s pattern store on Ravelry (https://www.ravelry.com/designers/rachel-roden)
To get the yarn Rachel recommends, head over to Jimmy Beans Wool (https://www.jimmybeanswool.com/knitting/yarn/BichesetBuches/LePetitLambswool.asp?showLarge=true&specPCVID=91487)
Contact
Affiliates
The Problem with Field Schools - CRMArch 176
Doug and Bill White start out this episode by talking about Bill's time at the American Cultural Resources Conference held in Spokane, WA for 2019. One of the discussion panels Bill was on was related to CRM training and experience and started to center around the effectiveness of field schools. They end with a discussion about the effectiveness of this podcast.
Links
Follow Our Panelists On Twitter
Bill @succinctbill; Doug @openaccessarch; Stephen @processarch; Bill A. @archaeothoughts; Chris W @Archeowebby, @DIGTECHLLC, and @ArchPodNet
Blogs:
Bill White: Succinct Research
Doug Rocks-MacQueen: Doug’s Archaeology
Stephen Wagner: Process - Opinions on Doing Archaeology
Chris Webster: Random Acts of Science
Affiliates
Desert Pack Animals: Introducing Donkeys and Camels! - Animals 16
This episode, Alex and Simona take the road less traveled and explore two staple desert pack animals: donkeys and camels! From extravagant pets to Sicilian carts, learn more about these two beasts of burden in the archaeological record and present day.
Sources
Fagan, B. (2015) The Intimate Bond: How Animals Shaped Human History. London: Bloomsbury Press
http://www.berksarch.co.uk/index.php/the-donkey-in-human-history-an-archaeological-perspective/
O’Connor, T. & Sykes, N. (Eds.) (2010) Extinctions and Invasions: A Social History of British Fauna, Windgather Press
Affiliates
Still Spooktober: They Built It on a Haunted Burial Ground - The Dirt 67
Spooktober winds to a close once again, and we end with a mystery. Bundle up and join Anna and Amber at Roopkund Lake, where bones scatter the shore and speculation and science meet. Who were the people whose skeletal remains keep appearing in a remote lake in northern India? How did they get there? How might we find out?
Links
10 Things You Should Know About Nanda Devi Raj Jat Yatra (eUttarakhand)
There's A Frozen Lake In India That's Full Of Skeletons. What On Earth Happened Here? (IFL Science)
Mystery Solved - The Skeleton Lake of India (Science, Dummy) cw: human remains
Inside Roopkund Lake, The Curious Indian Lake Where Skeletons Wash Ashore (All That’s Interesting)
Tourists to Roopkund trek back with human skeletons (The Indian Express)
Contact
Affiliates
Our Dwindling Archaeological Record, and Drones - TAS 76
Richie Cruz joins Chris Webster for a recording of You Call This Archaeology that we decided to record and release here. It’s a fun conversation that goes from the archaeological record that we’re starting to produce less and less to drones to whatever else. Enjoy!
Links
Happy Archaeology Fun Time
Contact
Chris Webster
Affiliates
The History of Orenburg Lace - Historical Yarn S1E5
In the first half of this episode we discuss the history of Orenburg Lace knitting. Then, we’ll discuss finishing the Zetland shawl!
Links
To get your copy of the pattern, and knit-a-long head over to Rachel’s pattern store on Ravelry (https://www.ravelry.com/designers/rachel-roden)
To get the yarn Rachel recommends, head over to Jimmy Beans Wool (https://www.jimmybeanswool.com/knitting/yarn/BichesetBuches/LePetitLambswool.asp?showLarge=true&specPCVID=91487)
Contact
Affiliates
A Scary Tech Story - ArchaeoTech 115
OK, it’s not that scary. However, not understanding the tech you’re using and what it’s capable of can be a harrowing experience that can result in the loss of business and more importantly, a loss of scientific data.
App of the Day
Webby: Coverage?
Contact
Chris Webster
Twitter: @archeowebby
Paul Zimmerman
Twitter: @lugal
Email: paul@lugal.com
Affiliates
Spooktober: The Nature of Evil - The Dirt 66
Come along for a look at the anthropology of “evil,” some of the psychological designations that true crime podcasts might neglect, some wildly speculative thoughts about the roots of human evil, and how scores on “psychopath tests” vary across societies. Plus, the earliest cold case murder, Machiavelli on Machiavellianism, and unfortunately, the entirely unwelcome reappearance of the Evil Neanderthal theory.
Links
How evil is a socially constructed concept: Evil across societies (The Manitoban)
Psychiatric labeling in cross-cultural perspective (Science)
The Stigma of Personality Disorders (Current Psychiatry Reports)
The Criminal Psychopath: History, Neuroscience, Treatment, and Economics (Jurimetrics)
This Author Thinks We Might Be on the Verge of a New Generation of Serial Killers (Vice)
World's Oldest Cold Case: A 430,000-Year-Old Murder Victim Found In Pit Of Bones (Forbes)
Unraveling the True Machiavelli (JHU Arts & Sciences Magazine)
500-year-old arrest warrant for Machiavelli discovered (Archaeology.wiki)
Monster Talk episode with Jon Ronson discussing the Psychopath Test
Contact
Affiliates
Our Ruined Lives with Damian Kirkwood - Ruins 8
In this episode of A Life In Ruins podcast, our hosts do something different. As opposed to interviewing an archaeologist and asking about their career, the hosts bring on zooarchaeologist Damian Kirkwood, whom they went to school with, and have a casual discussion about all things archaeology.
While the conversation begins with Damian explaining his credentials, the show quickly devolves into discussions about archaeological media representation, including a discussion on Indiana Jones, the Prime Directive, and a salty, yet educated argument against the existence of Bigfoot. we’ve decided to call the segment “Our Ruined Lives”.”
Oh, and don’t worry, we all agree that 10,000 BC is the worst film in cinema history.
Contact
Instagram: @alifeinruinspodcast
Facebook: @alifeinruinspodcast
Affiliates
Spooky Scary Archaeologists! Horror Stories feat. Ellery Thomas and Liz Pearson - Halloween Special - Modern Myth
Spooky Scary archaeologists!
This podcast is an anthology of creative stories, all within the theme of Halloween and a little bit of heritage.
Content Warning: Body Horror, Depressive thoughts, violence.
The first story is "Mud", written and narrated by Tristan Boyle, it is the story of a field archaeologist who is confronting a sickening realisation.
The next piece is a song called Nan Tuck, by Chalk Horse Music. Liz (of Chalk Horse Music) describes a witch legend in the County of Sussex where I live in the UK. It involves a woman that lived in the 16th century, Nan Tuck, which became the inspiration for this song.
The final story, Eternal Rest, written by Tristan and read by Ellery Thomas tells of a museum conservator who's accidentally damage turns into horror.
Thanks to Liz and Ellery for their contributions, you can find their work at the following links:
Liz - Chalk Horse Music - https://www.chalkhorsemusic.com/ - @chalkhorsemusic
Ellery - https://www.ellery.xyz/ - @elleryells
Estonian Lace Part 2 - Hist Yarn S1E4
In the first half of this episode we delve into the specific construction methods and stitches used in traditional Estonian Lace knitting. Then, we’ll discuss how to finish the wings of the Zetland shawl!
Links
To get your copy of the pattern, and knit-a-long head over to Rachel’s pattern store on Ravelry (https://www.ravelry.com/designers/rachel-roden)
To get the yarn Rachel recommends, head over to Jimmy Beans Wool (https://www.jimmybeanswool.com/knitting/yarn/BichesetBuches/LePetitLambswool.asp?showLarge=true&specPCVID=91487)