HEADLINES: 6kyo Croatian Settlement, Clovis Camp, and Rare Find in Poland - TAS 138
We’ve got three completely different news stories for you this week. We start with a site that was found in Croatia by basically looking at satellite maps and looking for interesting shapes in the water. We then go to Michigan in the USA and look at a Clovis site that was found by a self-taught researcher. Finally, we head to Poland where a farmer found, and reported, a unique hoard of metal artifacts.
Links
Archaeologist discovers 6,000 year-old island settlement off Croatian Coast
The Belson Site: A paleoindian campsite on the outwash plains of the Central Great Lakes
Contact
Chris Webster
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Ethnobotanicals and Religion with Jose Botello - Rock Art 52
Today we interview Jose Botello about his ethnobotanical research. These are the plants that are used for altered states of consciousness. We're also talking about the realm of syncretism where native religion meets Christianity.
Links
Contact
Chris Webster
Dr. Alan Garfinkel
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A Unique Journey to CRM with Maggie Barry - CRMArch 222
Maggie Barry didn't even know what CRM Archaeology was when she was in college at the University of Davis. Upon graduation with a degree in American Studies and a focus on Culture and Consumption, Maggie joined the Peace Corps and spent over two years in Botswana. When she came home she hiked the Pacific Crest Trail - a 2000+ hike along the west coast of the United States. She landed a few jobs in CRM some time later and is still working as an archaeologist. We talk to Maggie about her journey, what it taught her, and what it can teach others about their path to this unique lifestyle.
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
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Time Warped! Part Four: The Zooarchaeology of the Post Roman Period - Animals 38
In this episode of ArchaeoAnimals, Alex and Simona delve into the zooarchaeology of the post Roman period. Learn more about exquisitely carved combs, antler pottery stamps and very courageous sheep.
Links
Stanley West, 1985. 'West Stow, the Anglo-Saxon Village, Suffolk', East Anglian Archaeology 24
Crabtree, P. J. And Campana, D. V., 2013: Wool Production, Wealth and Trade in Middle Saxon England In Arbuckle, B. S. and McCarty, S., eds. Animals and Inequality in the Ancient World. Boulder: University Press of Colorado, in press
Pam Crabtree, 1989. 'West Stow, Suffolk: Anglo-Saxon Animal Husbandry', East Anglian Archaeology 47
Walrus Ivory Gaming Board from Coppergate
Contact
Alex FitzpatrickTwitter: @archaeologyfitz
Simona FalangaTwitter: @CrazyBoneLady
Alex’s Blog: Animal Archaeology
Music "Coconut - (dyalla remix)" https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_2UiKoouqaY
Affiliates
Arrrgh Ruined Lives with Maddy McAllister and Jamie Goodall - Ruins 72
In this episode of we have the pleasure of hosting the most fan-requested crossover: The Shipwreck Mermaid and the Pirate Historian. Dr. Maddy McAllister, aka the Shipwreck Mermaid, is a Maritime archaeology Curator based out of Australia. Dr. Jamie Goodall is a staff historian with the US government. They are both popular social media personalities on Twitter and Instagram. We discuss their respective careers and how they use primary source data and archaeological reports. We discuss Black Jack Anderson and the lack of famous pirates near Australia. Dr. Goodall enlightens us with more information about Zheng Yi Sao and we chat about if it's possible to see evidence of piracy in shipwrecks. Dr. McAllister and Dr. Goodall end the episode with advice for students interested in maritime archaeology or maritime history.
Literature recommendations:
1) X Marks the Spot: The Archaeology of Piracy edited by Russell K. Skowronek and Charles R. Ewen
2) Pieces of Eight: More Archaeology of Piracy edited by Russell K. Skowronek and Charles R. Ewen
3) Why We Love Pirates: The Hunt for Captain Kidd and How He Changed Piracy Forever by Rebecca Simon
4) The Alliance of Pirates: Ireland and Atlantic piracy in the early seventeenth century by Connie Kelleher
5) Unfinished Voyages: Western Australian Shipwrecks 1622-1850 by Graeme Henderson
Guest Contact
Dr. Goodall's Instagram and Twitter: @l_historienne
Dr. Goodall's Website: jamiegoodall.com
Dr. McAllister's Instagram: @shipwreckmermaid
Dr. McAllister's Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/maddy.mcallister.10 and https://www.facebook.com/shipwreckmermaid/
Contact
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Who's the New Guy? - Dirt 153
Remember that time we did a whole series on the human family tree and then finished talking about evolution forever because we were all done? HA! OF COURSE WE AREN'T DONE! There have been some amazing new discoveries in the human fossil record since that series dropped, so we're here to update you on what our family shrubbery looks like now. We journey to Siberia, the Philippines, China, and other places, and our story gets a whole lot more complicated! We love to see it.
Links
Human Evolution Interactive Timeline (Smithsonian Museum of Natural History)
Are Homo sapiens and Neanderthals the same species? (Stefan Milo, via YouTube)
Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR) (National Human Genome Research Institute)
First portrait of mysterious Denisovans drawn from DNA (Nature)
Biggest Denisovan fossil yet spills ancient human’s secrets (Nature)
New clue to human evolution's biggest mystery emerges in Philippines (CNN)
Indigenous Filipino Group Has Highest Known Denisovan Ancestry (The Scientist)
Denisovans: The ancient humans who share our ancestry (New Scientist)
Philippine Ayta possess the highest level of Denisovan ancestry in the world (Current Biology)
A new species of Homo from the Late Pleistocene of the Philippines (Nature)
Homo luzonensis: New human species found in Philippines (BBC News)
New species of ancient human discovered in the Philippines (National Geographic)
Homo naledi is only 250,000 years old – here’s why that matters (New Scientist)
Israeli fossil finds reveal a new hominid group, Nesher Ramla Homo (Science News)
A Middle Pleistocene Homo from Nesher Ramla, Israel (Science)
146,000-Year-Old Archaic Human Cranium Represents New Species: Homo longi (Sci-News)
'Dragon man' claimed as new species of ancient human but doubts remain
Contact
Email the Dirt Podcast: thedirtpodcast@gmail.com
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Contact
Email the Dirt Podcast: thedirtpodcast@gmail.com
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Olcott Archaeology with Jason Cooper - TAS 137
This week we interview Jason Cooper, an archaeologist with the Washington DOT, the current president of the Association for Washington Archaeology, and former archaeologist with the environmental firm, AMEC. In 2008 we were lucky enough to work on an Olcott excavation with Jason, and now he has co-written a book about those findings. We discuss the significance of the Olcott tradition in Washington, as well as how our findings on the CRM project in 2008 contributed to our knowledge of the Olcott people.
Links
Contact
Chris Webster
ArchPodNet
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The Origins of Religion with Dr. Mukhopadhyay - Rock Art 51
Dr. Tirtha Mukhopadhyay of Guanahuato University in Mexico is the number one guest on the Rock Art podcast and has received a tremendous amount of interest in his research and scholarship. The good doctor will spend with us an hour on the origins and development of religion. Our conversation includes discussions on rock art, human paleontology, shamanism, animism, totemism, and neurotheology. Don't miss this amazing journey into the relationships of science and religion.
Links
Contact
Chris Webster
Dr. Alan Garfinkel
ArchPodNet
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3D Methodologies in Mediterranean Archaeology - ArchaeoTech 162
On today’s episode we focus on one article from the Studies in Digital Heritage online and open-access journal. The latest issue was a special issue on 3D methodologies in Mediterranean archaeology. The article we discuss was written by Miriam Clinton and is called Online Gaming as Digital Heuristics. We thought this was interesting because it’s not about online gaming, per se, but the researchers did develop a game of sorts and had random people from the internet play this game in order to study movements through a reconstructed ancient house.
Links
Contact
Chris Webster
Twitter: @archeowebby
Paul Zimmerman
Twitter: @lugal
Email: paul@lugal.com
ArchPodNet
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Of Mammoths and Hand Sprays with Dr. Madeline Mackie - Ruins 71
On this episode of ALiRP, we interview our friend and colleague, Dr. Madeline Mackie. Dr. Mackie just began her position as an assistant professor at Weber State University in Ogden, Utah.
Dr. Mackie studies Paleoindian lifeways and big game hunting, as well as ochre hand sprays. We met Dr. Mackie at the University of Wyoming, where she dealt with our numerous shenanigans.
We start off by talking about her experiences growing up in Southern California and then delve into her MA research on hand sprays in Wyoming. Dr. Mackie then talks about the La Prele Mammoth site and we kind of nerd out about the finds. She then talks about post-doc life and the jobs market.
Literature Recommendations:
Anything by Dr. George Frison
The Fifth Beginning: What Six Million Years of Human History Can Tell Us About Our Future by Dr. Robert L. Kelly
The Lifeways of Hunter-Gatherers: The Foraging Spectrum by Dr. Robert L. Kelly
The Professor Is In: The Essential Guide to Turning Your Ph.D. Into A Job by Karen Kelsky
Guest Contact
Instagram: @madmac9
Contact
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We Stan a King: Nabonidus - Dirt 152
This week, Amber tells Anna the story of Nabonidus, King of Babylon, who, mid-kinging, tootled off to the Arabian desert for a decade to worship the moon god, Sin. But is that the whole story? Of course not. Tune in to learn what Nabonidus was maybe really doing out there.
Links
Cuneiform inscription from last king of Babylon discovered in Saudi Arabia (LiveScience)
Video: The rise and fall of the Assyrian Empire - Marian H Feldman (TED-Ed via YouTube)
A History of the Ancient Near East ca. 3000-323 BC (via WorldCat)
The Reign of Nabonidus King of Babylon 556-539 BC (Yale Babylonian Collection)
New Discoveries at Sela, the Mountain Stronghold of Edom (Ancient Near East Today)
Arabia and the Arabs: From the Bronze Age to the Coming of Islam (via WorldCat)
Contact
Email the Dirt Podcast: thedirtpodcast@gmail.com
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TIMELINES: The World During the Signing of the Declaration of Independence - Ep 136
Timelines is back, and this time we take a look at a time that is extremely significant to the United States: 1776, and the signing of the Declaration of Independence. We explore the events leading up the the Revolutionary war in America, as well as what was happening at the same time in other parts of the world: China and Africa.
Links
Contact
Chris Webster
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Recovering WWI and WWII soldiers in Latvia with Legenda Military Archaeology - CRMArch 221
Legenda Military Archaeology is a non-profit organization, built up from volunteers from around the world with a goal to find, recover and identify missing soldiers from the First and Second World Wars in Latvia. To date Legenda has found and identified thousands of formerly missing soldiers from all over Europe, the majority being mainly German, Latvian and from the former USSR. The Legenda's aim to continue what was started over 20 years ago, and believe there is plenty more work to do. On this episode we interview Victoria Brikmann from Legenda and a film maker producing the new documentary, "Keep Smiling."
Links
Legenda Military Archaeology: http://bkkomiteja.lv/
Keep Smiling: https://www.idfa.nl/en/film/e6d18465-59b2-46c5-bffb-b387d3ed8ac2/keep-smiling?fbclid=IwAR1IblSw2Y9t2IbQiYheaXOwJ7D4Y5HKN_5alD43ADqohIdbYRDukoYY0nk
Minelab: https://www.minelab.com/
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
ArchPodNet
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Romans in Israel, Greeks in Pompeii and an Abby in England - TAS 135
Your news for the week includes a Roman basilica, the largest found in Israel, uncovered in the city of Ashkelon. Next is a preserved, mummified, body of a freed Greek slave that lived in Pompeii. Finally, we go to England to find the remains of an Abbey that fell into disuse in the 1500s.
Links
Archaeologists find mummy, evidence of Greek in Pompeii
Contact
Chris Webster
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Kwatsáan Voices, Kwatsáan Views - HeVo 54
On today’s podcast Jessica interviews Zion White, Charles Arrow, and Aaron Wright from Archaeology Southwest, a 501c3 based in Tucson, Arizona. Archaeology Southwest is working with several Tribes in southern Arizona to establish permanent protection for the Great Bend of the Gila, a rich cultural landscape nestled between Yuma and Phoenix. Today’s guests have been documenting the Great Bend of the Gila landscape together over the past several years. They talk about the significance of this landscape both culturally and archaeologically, how they’d like to see the place treated, and what it means to them to be working collaboratively on documenting this cultural landscape.
Links
Contact
Jessica
Lyle
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Ancient Civ - Indus Valley with Stefan Milo - Ruins 70
On this episode of A Life in Ruins, we continue our series on ancient civilization and discuss Indus Valley Civilizations and their precursors. We have Stefan Milo join us to discuss this region. Stefan Milo is a popular Youtuber who has appeared on episodes 20 and 43. He made a video on an Indus Valley Civilization where he discusses the interesting lack of social hierarchy found in this civilization (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kxP1zornb-w). We struggle with geography, time periods, and basically everything in this episode but also discuss social hierarchy/structure.
Guest Contact
Stefan Milo Email: hello@stefanmilo.com
Stefan Milo Instagram: @historysmilo
Stefan Milo Youtube: Stefan Milo
Stefan Milo Website: HOME | Mysite
Stefan Milo Twitter: @Historysmilo
Show Contact
Instagram: @alifeinruinspodcast
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Shh! We're in the Library Episode - Dirt 151
This week, Anna and Amber take a tour of some of the libraries of the ancient world. We visit Mesopotamia for the origins of writing and the heartland of administrative paperwork, hit up Africa for the oral traditions of the Griots, browse the stacks of oracle bones in China, and...yes, talk about the Library of Alexandria.
Links
Archives and Bookkeeping in Southern Mesopotamia during the Ur III period (Comptabilités)
OIP 92. Persepolis Fortification Tablets (Oriental Institute Publications)
The Library of Alexandria Is Long-Gone – And All Around Us (Daily Beast)
The Life and Death of the Library of Alexandria (Literary Hub)
Maya codices: invaluable cultural heritage burned by the Inquisition in 1562 (Yucatan Times)
Contact
Email the Dirt Podcast: thedirtpodcast@gmail.com
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Hmong Ethnic Identity with Pakou Yang - Ep 50
The Hmong are a people spread across the world with a rich culture. Today, Alan talks to Pakou Yang and her Hmong family and ancestry. They discuss culture, religion, and celebrations.
Links
Contact
Chris Webster
Dr. Alan Garfinkel
ArchPodNet
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Teaching and Training in Archaeology: a historical perspective with John Collis - Ep 41
Archaeology & Ale is a monthly series of talks presented by Archaeology in the City, part of the University of Sheffield Archaeology Department’s outreach programme. This month we are proud to host John R. Collis from the University of Sheffield speaking on "Teaching and Training in Archaeology: a Historical Perspective with John Collis." This talk took place on Wednesday, June 30th, 2021, online via Google Meets.
John Collis, the University of Sheffield
John Collis studied archaeology in Cambridge in the 1960s, but also briefly in Prague, Tübingen and Frankfurt. He was an advisor at the research centre in Mont Beuvray in Burgundy for 17 years, and led excavations and field work in the Auvergne and in central Spain as well as England. He lectured in Sheffield from 1972 to 2005 and was one of the founding members of the department in 1975. He lectured on the European and the British Iron Age, and is mainly known for his writings on the Iron Age, urbanisation and the problems of the Celts. He also lectured on excavation techniques, and wrote Digging up the Past based on his lectures. However he was also writing about the training of archaeologists, and was chair of the Teaching and Training Committee of the Chartered Institute of Archaeologists (of which he was as a founding member), and helped introduce Continuing Professional Development (CPD) for archaeologists. He also set up the Teaching Committee of the European Association of Archaeologists to discuss the impact of the ‘Bologna’ structure on university degree courses and its impact on archaeology. He was advisor to the first European ‘Profiling the Profession’ led by Kenny Aitchison. He has written several articles on the ways in which training is given and different European traditions of teaching, digging and defining archaeologists.
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)
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Ethics and remote sensing in archaeology - Ep 161
When you fly your drone over a landscape or use satellite images in your research, do you ever thing about the people that live on and use the land that you're studying? Because of the scale of the images you might not be able to see actual people, but they're there. In a recent paper, Dylan Davis and Tanambelo Rasolondrainy, two of the authors and our guests today, explore the ethics of remote sensing and collaboration with stakeholders.
Links
Contact
Chris Webster
Twitter: @archeowebby
Paul Zimmerman
Twitter: @lugal
Email: paul@lugal.com
ArchPodNet
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