Shipwrecks! - TAS 177
Randomly, there were lots of shipwreck stories in the news this week, so we decided to do a themed episode! First up, we have a story about a shipwreck recovery off the coast of Oregon. Then we move over to a viking age shipyard that was discovered in Sweden. And finally, the excavation of a ship from the middle ages presents a unique challenge to archaeologists.
Connect with James on Twitter: @paleoimaging
Links
Legendary Spanish galleon shipwreck discovered on Oregon coast
'First of its Kind' Viking Age Shipyard Discovered at Birka, a Swedish World Heritage Site
Press Release from Stockholm University: Unique Viking Age Shipyard discovered at Birka
Archaeologists race against time to study crumbling 1,300-year-old shipwreck
Contact
Chris Webster
Rachel Roden
ArchPodNet
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Affiliates
Chariots of the Gods: A Book Review - Pseudo 95
You've heard of the title, but have you ever actually read the book? No worries, I've done it for you! Join me as I break down the chapters, demystify the examples, and review what can only be termed a "venerable classic" of pseudoarchaeology literature!
Connect with James on Twitter: @paleoimaging
Contact
ArchPodNet
APN Website: https://www.archpodnet.com
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Affiliates
CLAMoring for Data with Christine Bassett - Dirt 195
Ahoy! We’re still at sea, the ocean is still None of Our Business, and yet we’re learning so much about it! This week, we’ve got a special guest to guide us. Christine Bassett is currently a program coordinator for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s Weather Program Office (NOAA). Christine collects data from ancient Arctic shell middens to reconstruct climate and sea ice levels for archaeological sites in the Aleutian islands. Tune in to learn how she’s turning thousand-year-old clams into a climate thermometer!
Connect with James on Twitter: @paleoimaging
Links
Follow Christine on Twitter @ClamsAndClimate
Contact
Email the Dirt Podcast: thedirtpodcast@gmail.com
ArchPodNet
APN Website: https://www.archpodnet.com
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APN on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/archpodnet
Affiliates
New 3D Software for Artifact Documentation and Analysis - Ep 182
Archaeologists have been 3D scanning artifacts for a while now. But, what do you do with those scans? We post them on websites, use them in reports, and try to do some analysis, but, it's not consistent. This new paper from PLOS ONE is from the architects of a new software, Artifact 3D, that intends to take those scans and perform some high-level, detailed, analytical algorithms that are consistent and repeatable. We talk about it on this week's episode.
Connect with James on Twitter: @paleoimaging
Transcripts
Links
Polycam - LiDAR Scanner
Scaniverse - LiDAR Scanner
WIDAR
Contact
Chris Webster
Twitter: @archeowebby
Paul Zimmerman
Twitter: @lugal
Email: paul@lugal.com
ArchPodNet
APN Website: https://www.archpodnet.com
APN on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/archpodnet
APN on Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/archpodnet
APN on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/archpodnet
Affiliates
Indigenous Education, Climate Change, and Technologies of Care - HeVo 64
On today's episode, Jessica interviews Dr. Clint Carroll, Associate Professor of Native American and Indigenous Studies in the Department of Ethnic Studies at the University of Colorado Boulder and ᏣᎳᎩᎯ ᎠᏰᎵ ᎡᎲᎢ (Cherokee Nation Citizen). Jessica and Clint discuss his interdisciplinary community based work with the Cherokee Nation. He describes how the history of colonialism has challenged Cherokee relationships with the land, but also how the Cherokee Nation has sustained or reformed relationships to the land despite that painful legacy. Finally, Clint describes his efforts in conjunction with the Cherokee Nation Medicine Keepers to continue to support Cherokee connections to the land in the face of climate change through technologies of care, education, land management policy, and access.
Connect with James on Twitter: @paleoimaging
Transcripts
Links
Roots of Our Renewal: Ethnobotany and Cherokee Environmental Governance
Beth Rose Middleton Manning: Trust in the Land: New Directions in Tribal Conservation
Contact
ArchPodNet
APN Website: https://www.archpodnet.com
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Affiliates
Pirates and Privateers from Long Island Sound to Delaware Bay with Dr. Jamie L. H. Goodall - Ruins 113
No
On this episode of A Life in Ruins Podcast, we get the best pirate scholar, Dr. Jamie L. H. Goodall, back on the show. We discuss how she has been since we last talked and discuss what she actually does at her current job. Carlton and Connor then pepper her with questions about her new book, "Pirates and Privateers from Long Island Sound to Delaware Bay" which was released in May 2022. She details the differences in pirating between the Chesapeake Bay and the more northern bays/sounds. She helps us understand pirates personal lives and tells us that they even got married. Carlton and Connor then keep asking her questions because they are nerds and love pirate history.
If you have left a review of the podcast on iTunes or Spotify, please email us at alifeinruinspodcast@gmail.com so we can get shipping information to send you a sticker.
If you are listening to this episode on the "Archaeology Podcast Network All Shows Feed," please consider subscribing to the "A Life in Ruins Podcast" channel to support our show. Listening to and downloading our episodes on the A Life in Ruins channel helps our podcast grow. So please, subscribe to the A Life in Ruins Podcast, hosted by the Archaeology Podcast Network, on whichever platform you are using to listen to us on the "All Shows Feed." Support our show by following our channel.
Connect with James on Twitter: @paleoimaging
Transcripts
Links
Literature Recommendations
Why We Love Pirates: The Hunt for Captain Kidd and How He Changed Piracy Forever by Rebecca Simon
The Life and Tryals of the Gentleman Pirate, Major Stede Bonnet by Jeremy R. Moss
Pirate Queens: The Lives of Anne Bonny & Mary Read by Rebecca Simon
Guest Contact
Dr. Goodall's Instagram and Twitter: @l_historienne
Contact
Instagram: @alifeinruinspodcast
Facebook: @alifeinruinspodcast
Twitter: @alifeinruinspod
Website: www.alifeinruins.com
Ruins on APN: https://www.archaeologypodcastnetwork.com/ruins
ArchPodNet
APN Website: https://www.archpodnet.com
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Affiliates
tes
United Tools, Drought Finds, and the Most Important Site in the World - TAS 176
MEMBERS: CHECK YOUR AD-FREE DOWNLOADS FOR THIS EPISODE'S BONUS SEGMENT!
We've got a lot to cover in this news episode. We start with a tale of the Swiss Army Knife of southern Africa. Then we talk about a site in Iraq visible now because of drought and being recording in a rapid way. Then we go to Turkey to talk about the most famous site in the world: Gobekli Tepe. But wait, there's more! For members we have a bonus segment about the world's oldest company.
Connect with James on Twitter: @paleoimaging
Links
Contact
Chris Webster
ArchPodNet
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Affiliates
Perspectives on Rock Art with Ann Norman - Ep 84
Our guest scholar, Ann Norman, provides a remarkable story of her life and passion as a student of rock art. From extensive studies and first-hand testimony from indigenous people on the rock paintings in South Africa to her work in the Middle East, she captivates with insightful and sensitive treatments of her rock art travels. You will love this upbeat and striking discussion.
Connect with James on Twitter: @paleoimaging
Transcripts
Links
Contact
Dr. Alan Garfinkel
ArchPodNet
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Affiliates
Terra Nullius (EXTENDED EDITION)- Dirt 194
Terra nullius is a Latin phrase meaning “nobody’s land,” but historically it has tended to mean something closer to *grabby hands.* What does it mean when a place is considered no one’s? Are there still places where people aren’t? Are there places where we've never been? The answers may surprise you.
Connect with James on Twitter: @paleoimaging
Links
The Alaskan Island That Humans Can’t Conquer (Smithsonian Magazine)
Three High-Altitude Peoples, Three Adaptations to Thin Air (National Geographic)
Tibetans inherited high-altitude gene from ancient human (Science)
Explorer Reaches Bottom of the Mariana Trench, Breaks Record for Deepest Dive Ever (LiveScience)
What Land Did Europeans Actually Discover? [Infographic] (Popular Science)
Contact
Email the Dirt Podcast: thedirtpodcast@gmail.com
ArchPodNet
APN Website: https://www.archpodnet.com
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Affiliates
Tea-Break Time Travel - TeaBreak 0
Have you ever wanted to travel back in time? Back to the mediaeval period, to see the earliest printing press or spinning wheel? To the Bronze Age, watching from the sidelines as a blacksmith hammers out a beautiful leaf -shaped blade? How about the early Neolithic, to learn how to knap that perfect stone hand axe? Or even all the way back to the Palaeolithic, to witness the creation of the earliest ever clay object? Well, you’re in luck! My name is Matilda Siebrecht and I will be hosting a brand-new monthly series called Tea-break Time Travel. Every episode I will be joined on my tea break by a guest with expert knowledge on a particular archaeological object. Together, we will travel back in time, discussing the object itself as well as the cultures and environments surrounding its creation and use. So plug in your headphones, grab your hot beverage of choice, and settle down for a journey back in time!
Contact the Host
Email: matilda@thearchaeologiststeacup.com
insta: @the_archaeologists_teacup
twitter: @ArchaeoTeacup
ArchPodNet
APN Website: https://www.archpodnet.com
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Affiliates
How to Get Published in Archaeology - CRMArch 241
Have you ever thought about publishing a book or article in archaeology, only to be suddenly overcome with fear and uncertainty? Join us as we tell our own stories fear and uncertainty that led to ultimately getting published.
Connect with James on Twitter: @paleoimaging
Transcripts
Links
Follow Our Panelists On Twitter
Bill @succinctbill; Doug @openaccessarch; Stephen @processarch; Andrew @AndrewKinkella, Chris W @Archeowebby, @DIGTECHLLC, and @ArchPodNet
Blogs and Resources:
Bill White: Succinct Research
Doug Rocks-MacQueen: Doug’s Archaeology
Stephen Wagner: Process - Opinions on Doing Archaeology
Chris Webster: Random Acts of Science
Andrew Kinkella
ArchPodNet
APN Website: https://www.archpodnet.com
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Affiliates
Et tu, Clovis? On the Efficacy of the Clovis Point with Dr. Devin Pettigrew - Ruins 112
On this episode we bring back Dr. Devin Pettigrew to discuss a paper that came out in 2021. The name of that paper is "On the efficacy of Clovis fluted points for hunting proboscideans" by Eren et. al.
Dr. Pettigrew is an experimental archaeologist and together we discuss the pitfalls/successes of this study. We really dive deep into the article and the data they are using to summarize their argument. Dr. Pettigrew also gives us a background in the ballistics of atlatls as well as information around the use of ballistics gel/ceramics to interpret penetration effectiveness. Dr. Pettigrew then tell us about some of his current research and things he is studying.
If you have left a review of the podcast on iTunes or Spotify, please email us at alifeinruinspodcast@gmail.com so we can get shipping information to send you a sticker.
If you are listening to this episode on the "Archaeology Podcast Network All Shows Feed," please consider subscribing to the "A Life in Ruins Podcast" channel to support our show. Listening to and downloading our episodes on the A Life in Ruins channel helps our podcast grow. So please, subscribe to the A Life in Ruins Podcast, hosted by the Archaeology Podcast Network, on whichever platform you are using to listen to us on the "All Shows Feed." Support our show by following our channel.
Connect with James on Twitter: @paleoimaging
Transcripts
Links
Literature Recommendations
On the efficacy of Clovis fluted points for hunting proboscideans By Eren et al (2021)
Hunting Caribou: Subsistence Hunting Along the Northern Edge of the Boreal Forest by Henry S. Sharp and Karyn Sharp
The ballistics of archaic North American atlatls and darts by Devin B. Pettigrew
Survival by Hunting: Prehistoric Human Predators and Animal Prey by George Frison
The Traditional Bowyer's Bible edited by Jim Hamm
Guest Contact
Contact
Instagram: @alifeinruinspodcast
Facebook: @alifeinruinspodcast
Twitter: @alifeinruinspod
Website: www.alifeinruins.com
Ruins on APN: https://www.archaeologypodcastnetwork.com/ruins
ArchPodNet
APN Website: https://www.archpodnet.com
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Affiliates
Ancient Inequality, A Slave Ship and Giant Statues - Ep 175
There's a lot in the archaeology news as field seasons around the world kick off into high gear! This week we've got stories about the quantifying inequality among past societies, the conservations efforts around the last ship to bring slaves to the United States, and giant statues in Sardinia. That's giant statues, not statues of giants!
Connect with James on Twitter: @paleoimaging
Links
Why some ancient societies were more unequal than others (BBC)
Greater post-Neolithic wealth disparities in Eurasia than in North America and Mesoamerica (Nature)
Unlocking the Secrets of the ‘Clotilda,’ the Last Known Slave Ship
Archaeologists Unearth 3,000-Year-Old Giant Statues in Sardinian Necropolis
Contact
Chris Webster
ArchPodNet
APN Website: https://www.archpodnet.com
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Affiliates
Interview With The New Guy - Pseudo 94
It’s back! In this episode, APN kingpin Chris Webster interviews Andrew Kinkella about who he is, why he’s restarting the Pseudoarchaeology Podcast, and what to expect!
Connect with James on Twitter: @paleoimaging
Contact
ArchPodNet
APN Website: https://www.archpodnet.com
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Affiliates
Fruits de la Mer - Dirt 193
Welcome to episode one of our themed month: The Dirt at Sea! The oceans (and seas and lagoons and fjords and so on) have provided people with food and other resources for hundreds of thousands of years. We’ll be discussing some examples of this from the archaeological record. We’ll also investigate how archaeology can get at the relationship between people and the big blue – and it’s much more than just reconstructing ancient coastlines.
Connect with James on Twitter: @paleoimaging
Links
Last Interglacial Iberian Neandertals as fisher-hunter-gatherers (Science)
Research Shares Importance Of Studying Indigenous Oyster Farming History (Tasting Table)
Cetacean exploitation in Roman and medieval London (Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports)
Seeking Prehistoric Fermented Food in Japan and Korea (Current Anthropology)
Ancient seafarers may have hunted whales around the world (Science)
More Than 30 Million Years Ago, Monkeys Rafted Across the Atlantic to South America (Smithsonian)
Human evolution: Small remains still pose big problems (Nature)
On Crete, New Evidence of Very Ancient Mariners (New York Times)
Contact
Email the Dirt Podcast: thedirtpodcast@gmail.com
ArchPodNet
APN Website: https://www.archpodnet.com
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Affiliates
Gamification of Education with RISC - ArchaeoTech 181
MEMBERS: DON’T FORGET THE BONUS TRACK! AND THANKS FOR BEING YOU!!
We talk a lot about how to get archaeologists to learn more outside the field of archaeology in order to better understand archaeology. On this episode we talk to JD Calvelli from the University of Chicago's Center for Radical Innovation and Social Change (RISC) about gamifying the learning of data science. However, this isn't for adults; it's for 4th-6th graders! Adults are able to learn as well, though. Learn something new and do it in a fun way.
Connect with James on Twitter: @paleoimaging
Transcripts
Links
Algo-Rhythm
Contact
Chris Webster
Twitter: @archeowebby
Paul Zimmerman
Twitter: @lugal
Email: paul@lugal.com
ArchPodNet
APN Website: https://www.archpodnet.com
APN on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/archpodnet
APN on Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/archpodnet
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Affiliates
Two archaeologists visit Chichen Itza - TAS 174
ENCORE: We recently had the opportunity to visit Chichen Itza in Yucatán, Mexico. It was an incredible experience, but, being archaeologists, we of course came away with more questions than were answered! In this episode we give a brief overview Mayan civilization, including Chichen Itza, and then talk about our experience on an incredibly touristy tour! The take away is, do a little research ahead of time (like listening to this podcast!) to help prepare yourself before visiting the site!
Links
Contact
Chris Webster
Affiliates
Where in the World? Part Three: The Zooarchaeology of the Americas - Animals 47
Welcome to episode three of a miniseries focusing on the zooarchaeology of various world regions. This episode is centred around American zooarchaeology, focusing on the natural history and anatomy of the most prominent wild and domesticated species found throughout North and South America. Tune in for beaver-pretenders, bison-cattle hybrids and even more moose/elk arguments!
Connect with James on Twitter: @paleoimaging
Transcripts
Links
Anning, C. (2011) Inca success in Peruvian Andes 'thanks to llama dung'. BBC News.
Crader, D. C. (1997). Prehistoric use of beaver in coastal Maine (USA). Anthropozoologica, 25(26), 225-236.
- Halbert, N. et al. (2007). "Where the buffalo roam: The role of history and genetics in the conservation of bison on U.S. federal lands". Park Science. 24 (2): 22–29.
Hirst, K.K. (2018) Llamas and Alpacas: The Domestication History of Camelids in South America. ThoughtCo.
Hubbard, T. (2014). Buffalo Genocide in Nineteenth-Century North America. Colonial genocide in indigenous North America, 292-305.
Petrigh, R. S., & Fugassa, M. H. (2013). Molecular identification of a Fuegian dog belonging to the Fagnano Regional Museum ethnographic collection, Tierra del Fuego. Quaternary International, 317, 14-18.
Miller, G. R. (2003). Food for the dead, tools for the afterlife: Zooarchaeology at Machu Picchu. In Burger, R. L., and Salazar, L. C. (eds.), The 1912 Yale Peruvian Scientific Expedition Collections from Machu Picchu: Human and Animal Remains.
Saunders, N. J. (1994). Predators of Culture: Jaguar Symbolism and Mesoamerican Elites. World Archaeology, 26(1), 104–117.
Speller, C. F. et al. (2010). "Ancient mitochondrial DNA analysis reveals complexity of indigenous North American Canham domestication". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 107 (7): 2807–2812.
Turner, B. L., and Armelagos, G. J. (2012). "Diet, residential origin, and pathology at Machu Picchu, Peru". American Journal of Physical Anthropology. 149 (1): 71–83.
https://historicjamestowne.org/collections/artifacts/faunal-material/
https://blog.nature.org/science/2017/11/20/tracing-the-wild-origins-of-the-domestic-turkey/
Contact
Alex FitzpatrickTwitter: @archaeologyfitz
Simona FalangaTwitter: @CrazyBoneLady
Alex’s Blog: Animal Archaeology
Music "Coconut - (dyalla remix)" https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_2UiKoouqaY
Affiliates
The Past, Present and Future of Chichen Itza with Evan Albright - Ruins 111
On this episode, we talk with Evan Albright about his book "The Man Who Owned a Wonder of the World". This book (published in 2015), tells the story of Edward H. Thompson, an American who once owned the property on which Chichen Itza sits. We go through the history of this property and talk about guides, hotels, trains and what the future looks like for Chichen Itza.
If you have left a review of the podcast on iTunes or Spotify, please email us at alifeinruinspodcast@gmail.com so we can get shipping information to send you a sticker.
If you are listening to this episode on the "Archaeology Podcast Network All Shows Feed," please consider subscribing to the "A Life in Ruins Podcast" channel to support our show. Listening to and downloading our episodes on the A Life in Ruins channel helps our podcast grow. So please, subscribe to the A Life in Ruins Podcast, hosted by the Archaeology Podcast Network, on whichever platform you are using to listen to us on the "All Shows Feed." Support our show by following our channel.
Connect with James on Twitter: @paleoimaging
Transcripts
Links
Literature Recommendations
John Lloyd Stephens, Incidents of Travel in Yucatan (NYC: Harper & Bros., 1843)
Paul Sullivan, Unfinished Conversations: Mayas and Foreigners Between Two Wars (NYC: Alfred A. Knopf, 1989)
Walter W. Taylor, “A Study of Archaeology,” American Anthropologist, July 1948 (vol. 50, No. 3, Part 2)
R. Tripp Evans, Romancing the Maya: Mexican Antiquity in the American Imagination, 1820-1915 (Austin, University of Texas Press, 2010)
Guest Contact
Evan’s Twitter: @americanegypt
Contact
Instagram: @alifeinruinspodcast
Facebook: @alifeinruinspodcast
Twitter: @alifeinruinspod
Website: www.alifeinruins.com
Ruins on APN: https://www.archaeologypodcastnetwork.com/ruins
ArchPodNet
APN Website: https://www.archpodnet.com
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Affiliates
Little Petroglyph Canyon and Rock Art Dating - Rock Art 83 (5)
China Lake Naval Weapons Center in central eastern California is home to many weapons inventions and the most dense collection of rock art in the western hemisphere. At nearly a mile long Little Petroglyph Canyon contains 10s of thousands of individual rock art images. Both Chris and Alan have been there and Alan leads tours there every year. We talk about the rock art and some of the preservation efforts.
Connect with James on Twitter: @paleoimaging
Links
Contact
Chris Webster
Dr. Alan Garfinkel