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New paper alert: such a privilege to work with the amazing @elliescerri.bsky.social, @matejahajdi.bsky.social, and @chrisbstringer.bsky.social on a new review paper for the Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute: rai.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/...
rai.onlinelibrary.wiley.com
11d
Dr James Cole
New Paper Alert! great to have been involved with the BAS BIOPOLE team and collaborators in Dan Mayor's group at Exeter University. Looking forward to beginning work on Antarctic food webs shortly! #copepods #calanus #zooplankton #lipidbiomarkers #lipids #isotopes #bas #biopole
From Judge Dredd to bottlenose dolphins, the work of Leonie Sedman, Curator of Heritage and Collections Care, really does cover everything. Find out more about Leonie and what she gets up to in this @heritageinstitute.bsky.social interview: www.liverpool.ac.uk/heritage-ins...
14d
1mo
Looking forward to presenting our new work on evidence for recurrent and increasing control of fire at the Lower Palaeolithic site of Beeches Pit today at the Pathways to Ancient Britain workshop at Queen Mary University 🔥 🔥 🔥. Really exciting results and paper on the way soon 😃
Please join us this Thursday, 30th April, at 13:00 BST, for our final talk of the semester. We will be joined by Prof Nick Ashton (British Museum), and Dr Sally Hoare (University of Liverpool). If you'd like to attend, please register here: events.teams.microsoft.com/event/1342a8...
1mo
Sabena Blackbird
1mo
Happy to share our new paper on non-destructive FTIR analysis on silcrete artefacts from Mertenhof and Diepkloof with heating temperature reconstructions. Is the data beautiful and clean? No. But is it still meaningful? Yes! Study led by Will Archer: www.sciencedirect.com/science/arti...
🏺🧪 New paper: heated chert from Australia +45 Ka, poss. > 55 Ka. 15% of analysed #lithics were heated and later knapped. I would have liked more on technological aspects, to refine whether pieces worked before & after heating show differences in reduction etc. link.springer.com/article/10.1...
780,000-year-old charcoal from Gesher Benot Ya’aqov reveals that early hominins may have chosen their campsites partly for firewood access. Even the wood they burned tells us how they read their landscape. #Paleoanthropology #Acheulian #HumanEvolution www.anthropology.net/p/the-wood-t...
🧪 Lab-based microstratigraphic excavation for high-resolution archaeological sampling. #ICArEHB researchers Aldeias, Goldberg, McPherron, Li and Mallol co-author this #PaleolithicArchaeology study in J Paleo Arch using #Microstratigraphy. 🔗 10.1007/s41982-025-00253-y
21d
2mo
2mo
1mo
Transformative technologies that alter raw material properties, rather than just raw material shape and size, are key proxies for the evolution of hum…
www.sciencedirect.com
Trophic connections between Calanus spp. and deep-sea benthos in the Fram Strait, Arctic Ocean #stableisotopes www.sciencedirect.com/science/arti...
Humanities & Social Sciences, UoL
Fire, temperature control, and silcrete heat treatment at Diepkloof and Mertenhof Rock Shelters, West Coast, South Africa
Journal of Paleolithic Archaeology - We identify the oldest known example of systematic heat treatment of chert in the world. The specimens come from the base of one of Australia’s oldest...
link.springer.com
A new anthracological study from Gesher Benot Ya’aqov finds that early hominins chose their campsites partly around access to fuel.
www.anthropology.net
Earliest Lithic Heat Treatment in Australia is the World’s Oldest Known Treatment of Chert - Journal of Paleolithic Archaeology
The Wood They Burned: Firewood, Driftwood, and Camp Selection 780,000 Years Ago
27d
UoL EvoAnth Seminar Series
Achieved an academic milestone today - having our research be an obscure trivia answer on a quiz show! Thanks @felixthehauskat.bsky.social for sharing this with me! Everyone knows the answer, right…? 🔵
Trophic connections between Calanus spp. and deep-sea benthos in the Fram Strait, Arctic Ocean
Copepods of the genus Calanus are central to the ecological and biogeochemical functioning of polar pelagic ecosystems. They graze on seasonal phytopl…
www.sciencedirect.com
Dr Sally Hoare
Anthropology.net
1mo
ICArEHB
Stable Isotope Ecology (CER, Kyoto Univ.)
Mareike C Stahlschmidt
Dr Rebecca Wragg Sykes
Dr Izzy Wisher