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People like to joke about colons in academic titles, but the formula is pretty clearly "Title I Love: Title that Indexes this Content to its Readership." Let us have this one thing so that we can have a tiny crumb of cake and eat it too. 😅

We got safety vests for our chickens when we were having our new patio built - here's Azi briefly wearing one (she wasn't a fan)

At the advice of someone with several days of Mastodon experience, I'm reposting this with the hashtag #introduction to make myself easier to find:

I'm the International news editor at Science. I oversee most of our coverage from Asia, Africa, and Latin America but also edit lots of stories about global health and infectious diseases. Occasionally write stories as well. Especially interested in scientific misconduct. Cat-loving Dutchman living in Amsterdam.

Tips on using PAPYRUS, the ultimate #Twitter replacement

1) gather papyrus reeds
2) soak & press stalks into strips
3) weave into scroll
4a) write your missive and/or draw a pic on the scroll
4b) no character limit, just space limit
5) roll up scroll
6) hand deliver to one person

“There are times in life when people must know when not to let go. Balloons are designed to teach small children this.”

― Terry Pratchett

I'm told one can't really Toot threads on Mastodon, but I'm going to give it a try. Bear with me.
1. cdcgov posted FluView early this week; tomorrow is a federal holiday.
This week's edition is a little eye popping.
Let's start with this map. This year CDC has added a whole new activity level, "very high" & new colors, deep red & purple.
Whoa.

@ivanflis
a) that science does have a history. (Don't take it for granted as a universal, a-historical thing.)
b) that its history includes the social, cultural, political, economic etc history of the people, organisations and societies involved in science (as well as the intellectual content)
And depending on your students, c) that the history of modern, Western 'science' is only a small part of the human history of attempts to understand the natural world.
#hps #hstm #histsci

Why #ContextMatters (not only, but particularly) in #archaeology:

An archaeological artifact without its documented find context is … like an image ripped from a book (and the rest of the pages torn into shreds): something nice to look at, but missing the actual story about it.

A rare snow leopard roaming on Mount Everest at 18,000ft, amazing photo published in @thetimes today by Kittiya Pawlowski.

Beautiful Martian vista taken by the Curiosity Rover's Mastcam on sol 3646

NASA/JPL-Caltech/MSSS/Kevin M. Gill

#Mars #NASA #Science #Space

One of my fave work from home perks has been getting to spend more time tending to my !

Really not keen on framing of dispersals from Africa and expansion or contraction in hominin presence outside that continent as 'success/failure'.
We need more nuanced perspectives.
---
RT @NatureEcoEvo
Success and failure in early human dispersals #OutOfAfrica. New Perspective from Ryan Rabett.

nature.com/articles/s41559-017

Free to read link here: rdcu.be/E0Xi
twitter.com/NatureEcoEvo/statu

Are you a #youngresearcher with an outstanding #dissertation that was completed not more than two years ago? Does your dissertation deal with #socioenvironmental research or #landscape #archaeology? If this description fits you, you are a candidate for the #JohannaMestorfAward 2023. It is open to young resarchers of all scientific fields and it is endowed with a prize of 3000 Euro. How to apply and all further information: cluster-roots.uni-kiel.de/en/n

“He didn’t want to just merely predict the future; he wanted to prevent that future.” Great story by Zack Savitsky about Kurt Vonnegut, who envisioned many modern-day debates about science and ethics.

science.org/content/article/10

Are you an undergrad and interested in starting your career in science journalism? Apply for the Diverse Voices Science Journalism internship at
@NewsfromScience@twitter.com, coordinated by @scchak@twitter.com! We're looking for 3 people to join us next summer! Link: bit.ly/3UNykhN

@billcaraher @cdwren @admin

I mean, I use social media to share not just #archaeology but how #archaeological knowledge is produced

That's impossible to do for human remains if they can't be shown. I think a blanket ban means that we relegate a fairly important component of archaeological research to academic journals

Which leaves the actual study of human remains on social media to racist craniometry types. I don't know a perfect solution, but I think too strict of a ban is a problem

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Qoto Mastodon

QOTO: Question Others to Teach Ourselves
An inclusive, Academic Freedom, instance
All cultures welcome.
Hate speech and harassment strictly forbidden.