One of the rarer pottery types: a 15th/16th century CE ceramic grenade. It would have contained a black-powder load and was thrown by hand, flings or catapults after lighting a slow burning fuse. Virgilkapelle, Vienna. #archaeology #museum #history
A bit confused by all this but here goes! I post about #archaeology #experimentalarchaeology #heritageeducation #traditionalcrafts #hedgebothering and ok, #tea and #cats occasionally.
Currently finishing an experimental archaeology MSc at #exeteruni.
Err, that'll do for now, I'm sure I'll get the hang of it sometime soon.
There is rumoured to be one Eurasian #otter for every mile of coastline here on #Mull so that adds up to over 300 otters.
That said, they are still difficult to see at times, and usually demand good field-craft to get close to.
I have enjoyed numerous fantastic encounters with otters over the years, on workshops with clients, alone and in this case, with a friend.
It was #octopus for lunch for this female otter.
#Archaeodons #Archaeology #archeodon
@archaeodons, @ancientneareast
Let's go for a first #ANEThread, about excavation recording in #AncientNearEast field missions from western countries.
This is mainly based on my own bibliographical research, which concerns Bronze Age in Lebanon, Syria and Irak. There will surely be massive blind spots.
If you have insights from other periods and/or neighbor countries, feel free to complete !
[I will probably need a few evenings to complete the thread]
1/x
Pulling my hair out trying to write a funding application. Why is this so hard? In the meantime, here's a little bronze smiting god who appears equally unhappy #AncientNearEast #MetaArchaeoSocial
74 years ago today, on 12th #November 1948, Ray Williamson was ploughing a field on the #KenHill Estate in #Snettisham & turned up these amazing #tubular #torcs - the first of many finds which uncovered at the site over the next 50 years.
Tubular torcs like these are incredible - c.200mm in diameter & made of sheet #gold only 0.1mm thick, they each #weigh only c.110g (weight of a lemon or a small bar of galaxy #chocolate ).
More here about the finding: https://bigbookoftorcs.com/2020/07/15/the-torc-finders-of-snettisham/
In 1892, a farmer discovers a Bronze Age grave at Hammer near Nürnberg in southern Germany. Fragments of a clay pot, two needles, a knife and a sword. The sword became the reason for still ongoing discussions: its mushroom-shaped hilt looks similar to 14th century BCE Mycenaean swords, the blade Central European. One of the proofs for early contacts - and a find every German archaeology student has to know. Naturhistorisches Museum Nürnberg. #archaeology #museum #history
@amaury_h @apkallatu @ancientneareast thank you so much for clarifying.
A #FieldWorkFriday #FindsFriday combo - an unexpected find:
During #excavations an the #Chalcolithic settlement of #HujayratAlGhuzlan (Jordan) in 2010 we stumbled upon this little #vessel, hidden in a niche underneath the floor of one of the unearthed building remains there.
Tightly sealed with a lid of clay. And something rattling inside ...
@apkallatu @ancientneareast looks like that’s also the case for me. Please do post if you find a solution
This is the first #MetaArchaeoSocial discussion. Follow this hashtag to keep up to date and help shape the direction of https://archaeo.social.
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The server information has been updated with a section on community expectations: https://archaeo.social/about/more#expectations. This should be a living document that reflects the consensus of our community.
To start with, I'd like to open a discussion on expectations around images of human remains. These now require a content warning. Is this sufficient?
@ArchaeoBasti this is the github one I think https://stark1tty.github.io/Mastodon-Archaeology/
@skanman pXRF has become almost standard issue in archaeology these days, sometimes they're even calibrated for ancient alloys. But it's a worry when people use it on corroded metal without understanding that it has technical limitations, e.g. sample heterogeneity can significantly affect quantification (and old stuff tends to have extremely heterogeneous surfaces). This is why analysts may prepare samples by grinding off the corrosion crust in a small area. Even then not foolproof bc you can get quite variable segregation of corrosion product in sub-surface layers of corroded metal. I don't want to ramble on too much about this but N. Shugar wrote an excellent article in 2013 "Portable X-ray Fluorescence and Archaeology: Limitations of the Instrument and Suggested Methods to Achieve Desired Results", if you are keen to explore further.
@skanman yes you're right. It's impt to think about the human consciousness behind every artefact.
Good luck with your travels and biz in Asia, but I really hope you do get a chance to visit the La Téne type site, I am certain you would enjoy it.
Hello all, here is a wee #introduction.
I'm an (Upper Palaeolithic) archaeologist by training and still love #archaeology but these days I'm constructing a different way to work on it.
I live in Bordeaux, France, but Ireland still feels like home.
I pay a lot of attention to what's happening with the #climate and #environment.
I like cooking, cycling, being outdoors, growing things (badly), reading, film, sewing, diy, camping, music, languages, a bit of nerdery, and doing nothing.
@NikaShilobod will do!
@NikaShilobod Thanks Nika, this is really useful.
Archaeologist, metals specialist. From rusty nails to golden bronzes - no object turned away (researcher at TU Darmstadt).