Our Bluesky account - University College Dublin,
Ireland - posts by Aidan O'Sullivan and Conor McDermott
UCD School of Archaeology, Dublin
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Cultúir á gCeiliúradh - Celebrating Cultures!
Delighted to see our ‘Objects, War and Memory in Ireland past and present’ exhibition included as part of the Dún Laoghaire-Rathdown County Council Celebrating Cultures programme for Refugee Week in the Lexicon Library.
www.dlrcoco.ie/dlr-events/e...
We are delighted to welcome Dr James Mathieu to @ucdarchaeology.bsky.social Ardmore Annexe 2pm, 20 May. He will talk on converting theory into practices within experimental archaeology. James is currently a Consulting Scholar at Penn Museum but known for his contributions to Experimental Archaeology
Medieval Mile Museum in Kilkenny is hosting Dr Robert Power on 29 May, 6.00pm, talking on his work FoodCult project work.
"What did people living in Kilkenny during the 1500s and 1600s really eat? What can centuries old teeth reveal about daily life, health and environment from medieval Kilkenny?"
'The birth, life and death of an early medieval roundhouse'
🛖 Brendan O'Neill, Aidan O'Sullivan and Caitriona Moore on their feature in Archaeology Ireland tell the story of a early medieval round house at from construction to arson and excavation.🔥
www.ucd.ie/archaeology/...
www.eventbrite.ie/e/archaeolog...
We are delighted to see our new MSc and GradDip in Mediterranean Archaeology featured in the news section of the Summer 2026 edition of Archaeology Ireland.
“UCD has rapidly grown its expertise in the study of Mediterranean pasts to become a global leader"
@ucdarchaeology.bsky.social
UCD School of Archaeology, Dublin
Enjoy this new video to promote our MSc and Graduate Diploma in Mediterranean Archaeology at University College Dublin, Ireland offered by UCD School of Archaeology and UCD school of Classics.
Further detail on the programme please visit:
hub.ucd.ie/usis/!W_HU_M...
www.youtube.com/watch?v=VotB...
‘Dietary practices in Iron Age Northern and Central Botswana: microbotanical evidence from dental calculus’
Congratulation to Dr Robert Power and co-authors on this major new Open Access paper in Archaeological and Anthropological Sciences
doi.org/10.1007/s125...
@researchireland.ie @maxplanck.de
UCD School of Archaeology, Dublin
UCD School of Archaeology, Dublin
First day on site at Glendalough for our @ucdarchaeology.bsky.social training excavation. Only 40 (FORTY!!) people on site today. Great progress - in rather mixed weather, ending up with our first trowelling lines of the season. And one piece of medieval ceramic before the end of the day as well...
UCD School of Archaeology, Dublin
UCD School of Archaeology, Dublin
Team Prehistoric Policies at @ucdarchaeology.bsky.social for an in person meeting. Tx to @britishacademy.bsky.social for funding.
The tempo of crop adoption in the Kalahari Basin Area remains imperfectly understood, with most inferences drawn from sparse macrobotanical finds and stable isotope baselines rather than direct evidence of plant use at the individual level. A long-standing question — the ‘Kalahari Debate’ — concerns whether forager communities in southern Africa were isolated from, or progressively integrated with, neighbouring food-producing societies. The more recent three-layer approach suggests a drawn-out process of complex Holocene interactions among Wilton-producing foragers, Late Stone Age Khoe-Kwadi sheep herders, and later Bantu farmers. This study assesses whether cereals became dietary staples in northern and central Botswana during the early part of the Late Iron Age. We analysed microbotanical remains in dental calculus from four individuals from Nǃoma, Taukome and Xaro. Short-cell phytolith morphotypes consistent with Panicoideae were common at Nǃoma and Taukome, with rare dendritic long-cells suggestive of husk tissue; while starches were scarce. Xaro produced very low counts dominated by Pooideae short-cells. Proteomic analysis of the three dental calculus samples yielded no dietary proteins but did identify oral bacteria, including those associated with periodontal disease. Dietary findings align with published stable carbon isotope evidence: Nǃoma and Taukome show values consistent with diets rich in C4 crops (for example sorghum and pearl millet). At Nǃoma, differences between childhood tooth enamel (records childhood diet) and adult bone collagen (records primarily adult diet) point to a shift from C3 foraging/fishing in youth to C4 crop consumption in adulthood. These results provide the first direct microbotanical evidence of cereal consumption in Iron Age Botswana, consistent with the KBA framework in which crops became embedded through sustained forager, herder, and farmer interaction.