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SteveMDFP

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Re: Archaeology/Paleontology news
« Reply #550 on: October 06, 2023, 09:40:41 PM »
... One question archaeologists will definitely be wrestling with in the coming years is why, if people have been in the Americas since 30,000 or even 23,000 years ago, there aren’t more sites with similar ages scattered across the continent. And one possible answer is that many of them are underwater, swamped by sea levels that rose as the gargantuan ice sheets melted.

That's one possibility, but I think only a partial explanation. at best.  Another might be that the early groups didn't survive.  It would be incredibly helpful to find bodily remains.  One might determine rates of injuries and composition of diet, for example.  Maybe there were a lot of poisonous snakes, that later migrants exterminated.  Many possibilities.
 

oren

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Re: Archaeology/Paleontology news
« Reply #551 on: October 06, 2023, 10:49:34 PM »
The evidence piling up does suggest a much earlier human entry into North America than previously thought. In the most reasonable scenario this would have been by Pacific coastal hopping.
Perhaps the early entrants did die out, although humans are quite tenacious and the climate did not suddenly get worse, as far as I know.

kassy

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Re: Archaeology/Paleontology news
« Reply #552 on: October 07, 2023, 06:08:46 PM »
There is a distinct difference in technologies between the Clovis people and earlier finds and there is a gap in between them and no real genetic trace which could mean they disappeared before contact or maybe even that they were the same people going for it some thousands of years earlier.
We can´t really tell.
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Richard Rathbone

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Re: Archaeology/Paleontology news
« Reply #553 on: October 07, 2023, 07:19:18 PM »

Perhaps the early entrants did die out, although humans are quite tenacious and the climate did not suddenly get worse, as far as I know.

The typical hunter-gather group is too small to supply suitable mates for its next generation, and if a pioneer group lost contact with the rest of humanity and was unable to trek back to the traditional meeting places at the traditional time of year, it would eventually die out due to inbreeding. The excursion from Africa that eventually populated the rest of the world with Sapiens very nearly suffered this fate and at least one earlier one was subsumed into Neanderthals by cross breeding. There are also hints in the ancient Sapiens genome that the same thing could have happened in the opposite direction with an into-Africa group of Neanderthals getting absorbed into Sapiens.

Once enough groups make it into America, they can exchange mates with one another, develop an distinct American culture, rapidly spread across the continent, drive the megafauna extinct. But if only one group made it across in a thousand years, they'd die out from inbreeding before new blood arrived to refresh the gene pool.

John_the_Younger

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Re: Archaeology/Paleontology news
« Reply #554 on: October 07, 2023, 08:47:07 PM »
A little quote from Wikipedia:
Quote
Inbreeding increases homozygosity, which can increase the chances of the expression of deleterious or beneficial recessive alleles and therefore has the potential to either decrease or increase the fitness of the offspring.
  I read about this in some paper (report of a paper, actually) that said that inbreeding probably saved homo sapiens at some point.

But it could have killed off other groups...


Bruce Steele

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Re: Archaeology/Paleontology news
« Reply #555 on: October 07, 2023, 09:03:06 PM »
Hunter gathering cultures existed in Southern Calif. until recent times < 250 years ago. Because acorn production was consistent enough to sustain relatively large populations the peoples in Southern Calf.  had no need to switch to agriculture but remain hunters, fishermen and foragers for fifteen thousand years. So the limits of population size in hunter gatherer populations was determined by habitat suitability and inbreeding was controlled by social conventions like finding a bride in predetermined villages sometimes quite distant from each other. 
 Linebreeding can be used to stabilize desirable traits in animal husbandry , that is father to daughter and keep the offspring that carry the trait desired. Inbreeeding is brother to sister and not a good practice.

kassy

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Re: Archaeology/Paleontology news
« Reply #556 on: October 08, 2023, 10:54:40 AM »
Quote
So the limits of population size in hunter gatherer populations was determined by habitat suitability and inbreeding was controlled by social conventions like finding a bride in predetermined villages sometimes quite distant from each other.

Oral cultures have their knowledge stored in stories. One of the things they keep track of is who is related to who. (See The Memory Code by Lynne Kelley, very interesting read).

From the archaeological record we know that in some cultures the males stay put and in others it is the females.

Minor quibble: the hunter gatherers would have a hard time finding brides in villages. There would be gatherings of many tribes at certain feasts which was when the arrangements were probably made. 
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zenith

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Re: Archaeology/Paleontology news
« Reply #557 on: October 09, 2023, 08:47:21 PM »
the event(s) that led to the sea peoples, who became known as the palestinians or philistines of the bible. at the same time the nomadic pastoralist tribes of the sub-fertile crescent wastelands were forced to settle down as their agrarian trading partners had collapsed, this was the beginning of hebrew and judaism. eventually they wrote down all the (oral) stories of civilization they'd encountered from atum (who became adam) to gilgamesh (who became noah) with themselves as the heroes of the story.

the prophecies of isaiah and jeremiah (for ex.) are easier to understand if you're aware of the precession of the equinox, which people (natufians) were working out since gobekli tepe, along with the annual procession. bull-ram-fish, next is the age of aquarius, and noah came off the mountain with 10 (the number of completion/perfection) commandments written on two tablets as the material world is dualistic (also carved in stone at gobekli tepe - the two humanoid figures in the centre with serpents slithering up their backs).

The Sea Peoples & The Late Bronze Age Collapse // Ancient History Documentary (1200-1150 BC)


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« Last Edit: October 09, 2023, 09:05:54 PM by zenith »
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zenith

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Re: Archaeology/Paleontology news
« Reply #558 on: October 09, 2023, 09:15:36 PM »
The evidence piling up does suggest a much earlier human entry into North America than previously thought. In the most reasonable scenario this would have been by Pacific coastal hopping.
Perhaps the early entrants did die out, although humans are quite tenacious and the climate did not suddenly get worse, as far as I know.

haida gwaii wasn't entirely covered by ice during the last ice age, it's a key, or so it seems. most of the good stuff is underwater though, that's understood. the haida were known, by the early european explorers, as the vikings of the pacific. they'd leave their islands fortress and raid as far south as washington state. they made armour and and their art is reminiscient of the ainu from japan. the first nations of the pacific coast (the super-hiway) view polynesians as their cousins.
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John_the_Younger

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Re: Archaeology/Paleontology news
« Reply #559 on: October 12, 2023, 07:37:01 PM »
The timings for "out of Africa" (OOA) events are suggested by this paper:
North African humid periods over the past 800,000 years
Edward Armstrong, et al., Nat Commun 14, 5549 (2023). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-023-41219-4
The green dots on the paper's Figure 1 suggest OOA possibilities: just twice in the past 100,000 years, but 6 or 7 opportunities during the previous 100k. (click for enlargement)

Bruce Steele

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Re: Archaeology/Paleontology news
« Reply #560 on: October 12, 2023, 09:06:05 PM »
Boats allowed humans to move thousands of miles here along the North Pacific continental margin so what prevented similar human movement out of Africa?

kassy

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Re: Archaeology/Paleontology news
« Reply #561 on: October 12, 2023, 10:30:28 PM »
The paper above talks about a greener Sahara. This opened up a land route which we know existed from archaeological evidence. At the time everything around there was greener so they just walked on to greener pastures. And then on to more greener pastures.

One possible reason is that they do not have that much useful waterways and most big river systems are far away from other continents. They probably did not use boats that much. So we learned about them later in other lands where they were more useful.
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oren

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Re: Archaeology/Paleontology news
« Reply #562 on: October 16, 2023, 09:00:27 AM »
From Wikipedia:
After Homo erectus possibly used watercraft more than a million years ago to cross straits between landmasses,[2][3] boats have served as transportation far into pre-historic times.[4] Circumstantial evidence, such as the early settlement of Australia over 40,000 years ago, findings in Crete dated 130,000 years ago[5] and in Flores dated to 900,000 years ago,[6] suggest that boats have been used since pre-historic times.[non sequitur] The earliest boats are thought to have been dugouts,[7][dubious – discuss] and the oldest boats found by archaeological excavation date from around 7,000 to 10,000 years ago.

vox_mundi

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Re: Archaeology/Paleontology news
« Reply #563 on: November 06, 2023, 05:32:53 PM »
New Evidence Strongly Suggests Indonesia's Gunung Padang Is Oldest Known Pyramid
https://phys.org/news/2023-11-evidence-strongly-indonesia-gunung-padang.html



A team of archaeologists, geophysicists, geologists, and paleontologists affiliated with multiple institutions in Indonesia has found evidence showing that Gunung Padang is the oldest known pyramid in the world. In their paper published in the journal Archaeological Prospection, the group describes their multi-year study of the cultural heritage site.

Gunung Padang has for many years been considered a megalithic structure—it sits on top of an extinct volcano in West Java, Indonesia, and is considered by locals to be a sacred site. In 1998, it was declared to be a cultural heritage site. For many years there has been disagreement regarding the nature of the hill. Some have suggested it was made naturally with humans adding some adornments on top, while others have argued that evidence has suggested the hill was all or mostly man-made.

For this new study, the research team conducted a long-term, scientific study of the structure. Over the years 2011 to 2015, they studied the structure using seismic tomography, electrical resistivity tomography and ground-penetrating radar. They also drilled down into the hill and collected core samples that allowed them to use radiocarbon dating techniques to learn the ages of the layers that make up the hill.

In studying all their data, the research team found what they describe as clear evidence showing that the Gunung Padang was made mostly by human hands. The also found evidence showing that the structure was built in stages, thousands of years apart. And, they found that the older parts of the structure were made sometime between 25,000 and 14,000 years ago, making it the oldest known pyramid in the world today.

More specifically, the researchers found evidence of several efforts that together over time, added up to a completed structure. The first consisted of sculpted lava—where builders had carved shapes onto the top of a small, dead volcano. Then, several thousand years later, sometime between 7900 to 6100 BCE, another group added a layer of bricks and rock columns. Some unknown time later, another group added a dirt layer to part of the hill, covering some of the earlier work. Then sometime between 2000 and 1100 BCE yet another group added more top soil, stone terracing, and other elements.

The research team has also found some evidence suggesting there might be some hollow parts inside the structure, suggesting possible hidden chambers. They plan to drill down to them and then lower a camera to see what might be in these areas.

Danny Hilman Natawidjaja et al, Geo‐archaeological prospecting of Gunung Padang buried prehistoric pyramid in West Java, Indonesia, Archaeological Prospection (2023)
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/arp.1912
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kassy

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Re: Archaeology/Paleontology news
« Reply #564 on: December 19, 2023, 06:27:15 PM »
Ancient Mesopotamian Bricks Captured a Mysterious Blip in Earth's Magnetic Field

Bricks crafted from clay and used to build one of the most epic civilizations in history are now giving scientists a new tool for understanding the history of our planet.

Made some 3,000 years ago, the Mesopotamian bricks contain grains of iron oxide that, to the right interpreter, reveal fascinating changes in the magnetic field that runs through and envelops Earth in a protective barrier.


The breakthrough comes in the form of a conveniently stamped description that allows scientists to determine the age of the bricks, which in turn allows for the precise dating of any geological records they contain.

The method gives us a new way to better understand how our planet's magnetic field has changed and evolved over time – which in turn could help us make better predictions about its present and future behavior.

"We often depend on dating methods such as radiocarbon dates to get a sense of chronology in ancient Mesopotamia," explains archaeologist Mark Altaweel of University College London.

"However, some of the most common cultural remains, such as bricks and ceramics, cannot typically be easily dated because they don't contain organic material. This work now helps create an important dating baseline that allows others to benefit from absolute dating using archaeomagnetism."

...

The technique is pretty simple. Each of the 32 Mesopotamian clay bricks in the study is stamped with the name of the king that reigned at the time the brick was made. In order to date the material, the researchers narrowed down the most likely range of years during which each king was probably ruling.


Then, they carefully chipped a tiny piece off each of the bricks, and used a magnetometer to measure the alignment of microscopic grains of iron oxide embedded therein. This technique allowed them to broadly reconstruct the behavior of the planetary magnetic field over a period of about 2000 years, from the 3rd to the 1st millennium BCE.

Then, they compared their results to other reconstructions of the magnetic field derived from archaeomagnetic studies.

Collectively, this large pool of data from around the globe hints at something known as the Levantine Iron Age geomagnetic Anomaly (LIAA), a mysterious spike in magnetic field strength thought to have taken place over what is now Iraq between around 1050 and 550 BCE.

The team's reconstruction also confirmed the existence of the LIAA, providing one of the few records of the anomaly from within Iraq itself. What's more, the analysis revealed short, dramatic fluctuations during the reign of Nebuchadnezzar II between around 604 and 562 BCE, showing that Earth's magnetic field can change quite significantly on short timescales.

The work is a double-edged achievement: matching the bricks to the magnetic field works in the other direction, giving scientists a tool for confirming the dates that certain kings ruled Mesopotamia.


https://www.sciencealert.com/ancient-mesopotamian-bricks-captured-a-mysterious-blip-in-earths-magnetic-field
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morganism

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Re: Archaeology/Paleontology news
« Reply #565 on: January 09, 2024, 09:38:50 PM »
Archaeologists Keep Finding Evidence of a Mysterious Ancient Cult In Europe

The discovery of a gilded belt buckle depicting a snake eating a frog was thought to be unique. However, similar evidence is popping up across Europe.

Gilded belt buckles discovered across Europe have revealed a previously-unknown ancient fertility cult with ties across the continent, researchers believe.

Four bronze belt ends depicting a snake devouring a frog—thought to be a symbol of creation and/or fertility—were recently discovered in Moravia, Bohemia, Bavaria, and Hungary. Because of their near-identical shape and make, archaeologists now believe that these belt ends are evidence of an unknown pagan cult with far-reaching and diverse populations across Europe in the early Middle Ages.

“When the belt with the motif of a snake devouring a frog was discovered with the help of metal detectors at the site near Břeclav in southern Moravia, we thought it was a rare find with a unique decoration,” said lead researcher Jiří Macháček in a news release.

“However, we later found that other nearly identical artifacts were also unearthed in Germany, Hungary and Bohemia. I realized that we were looking at a previously unknown pagan cult that linked different regions of central Europe,” the head of the Department of Archaeology and Museology at the Masaryk University Faculty of Arts said.

Macháček’s team conducted a thorough series of analyses to learn more about the buckles and their provenance, which they reported in the Journal of Archaeological Science.

Their work involved making high-tech scans and conducting a lead isotope analysis of the buckles to determine their composition, as well as three-dimensional scans to see how closely-related the four buckles really were to one another.

According to the analysis, not only were most of the buckles made from the same wax cast, but the copper used to make them came from the same metal ore in the Slovak Ore Mountains—one of the main suppliers for this material in Europe during the seventh and eighth centuries. The 3D models suggest that the buckles came from the same workshop.

Because of how widespread and similar the fittings are, the authors believe the belts were a way to communicate between classes and peoples. This theory upends a previously-held idea that this style of belt was only used by elites  within the Avar ethnic group—a powerful group of people who conquered southeast central Europe in the sixth century and whose empire lasted some 200 years.

Iconographic analysis of the snake-eating-a-frog motif also revealed that its symbols are ones that show up in various artifacts across cultures in Europe at the time. For example, the snake appears on Avar artifacts symbolizing creation and in Slavic mythology to mean coming from the earth. The frog, on the other hand, could represent a Slavic deity of fertility or a woman who has just given birth. “It was a universally comprehensible and important ideogram” said Macháček.

Taken together, the study’s authors believe the belt buckles were worn by members of a pagan cult, with members spread across Europe through the sixth to eighth centuries. “Today, we can only speculate about its exact meaning, but in the early Middle Ages, it connected the diverse peoples living in Central Europe on a spiritual level,” said Macháček

https://www.vice.com/en/article/jg5n3p/archaeologists-keep-finding-evidence-of-a-mysterious-ancient-cult-in-europe

morganism

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Re: Archaeology/Paleontology news
« Reply #566 on: January 12, 2024, 05:38:13 PM »
Laser mapping reveals oldest Amazonian cities, built 2500 years ago

Neighborhoods, farms, and roads are 1000 years older than previous discoveries


Archaeologists once believed the ancient Amazon rainforest was an inhospitable place, sparsely populated by bands of hunter-gatherers. But the remains of enormous earthworks, pyramids, and roads from Bolivia to Brazil discovered over the past 2 decades have proved conclusively that the Amazon was home to large, complex societies long before European colonizers arrived. Now, there’s evidence that another human society—the oldest yet—left its mark on the region: A dense network of interconnected cities, now hidden beneath the forest in Ecuador’s Upano Valley, has been revealed by the laser mapping technology called lidar. The settlements, described today in Science, are at least 2500 years old, more than 1000 years older than any other known complex Amazonian society.

(...)
Stéphen Rostain, an archaeologist at CNRS, France’s national research agency, began excavating in the Upano Valley nearly 30 years ago. His team focused on two large settlements, called Sangay and Kilamope, and found mounds organized around central plazas, pottery decorated with paint and incised lines, and large jugs holding the remains of the traditional maize beer chicha. Radiocarbon dates showed the Upano sites were occupied from around 500 B.C.E. to between 300 C.E. and 600 C.E. “I knew that we had a lot of mounds, a lot of structures,” Rostain says. “But I didn’t have a complete overview of the region.”
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That changed when Ecuador’s National Institute for Cultural Heritage funded a lidar survey of the valley in 2015. Specially equipped planes beamed laser pulses into the forest and measured their return path, revealing topographic features otherwise invisible under the trees.

The lidar data allowed Rostain and his collaborators to see the connections between settlements and also uncovered many more. “Each day it was Christmas, with a new gift,” Rostain says. The team identified five large settlements and 10 smaller ones across 300 square kilometers in the Upano Valley, each densely packed with residential and ceremonial structures. The cities are interspersed with rectangular agricultural fields and surrounded by hillside terraces where people planted crops, including the corn, manioc, and sweet potato found in past excavations. Wide, straight roads connected the cities to one another, and streets ran between houses and neighborhoods within each settlement. “We’re talking about urbanism,” says co-author Fernando Mejía, an archaeologist at the Pontifical Catholic University of Ecuador.

 
aerial view of a complex of earthen platforms
A large complex of earthen platforms in Nijiamanch, one of the urban settlements in the Upano Valley.Stéphen Rostain

Although the researchers don’t yet know how many people lived in the Upano Valley, the settlements were large: The core area of Kilamope, for example, covers an area comparable in size to the pyramid-studded Giza Plateau in Egypt or the main avenue of Teotihuacan in Mexico. The extent of Upano’s landscape modification rivals the “garden cities” of the Classic Maya, the authors say. And what’s been discovered so far “is just the tip of the iceberg” of what could be found in the Ecuadorian Amazon, Mejía says.

The network of roads connecting the Upano sites suggests they all existed at the same time. They are a millennium older than other complex Amazonian societies, including Llanos de Mojos, a recently discovered ancient urban system in Bolivia. The Upano Valley cities were denser and more interconnected than sites in Llanos de Mojos, Rostain says. “We say ‘Amazonia,’ but we should say ‘Amazonias,’” to capture the region’s ancient cultural diversity, he says.

The details of each culture, however, are still coming into view. People in both the Upano Valley and Llanos de Mojos were farmers who built roads, canals, and large civic or ceremonial buildings. But, “We’re just beginning to understand how these cities were functioning,” including how many people lived in them, who they traded with, and how they were governed, says Jaimes Betancourt, who studies Llanos de Mojos.

So it’s too soon to compare the Upano cities with societies such as the Classic Maya and Teotihuacan, which were “much more complex and more extensive,” says Thomas Garrison, an archaeologist and geographer at the University of Texas at Austin who specializes in lidar and wasn’t involved in the work. Still, he says, “It’s amazing that we can still make these kinds of discoveries on our planet and find new complex cultures in the 21st century.”

https://www.science.org/content/article/laser-mapping-reveals-oldest-amazonian-cities-built-2500-years-ago


Two thousand years of garden urbanism in the Upper Amazon

https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/science.adi6317


When intact, the Amazonian forest is dense and difficult to penetrate, both on foot and with scanning technologies. Over the past several years, however, improved light detection and ranging scans have begun to penetrate the forest canopy, revealing previously unknown evidence of past Amazonian cultures. Rostain et al. describe evidence of such an agrarian Amazonian culture that began more than 2000 years ago. They describe more than 6000 earthen platforms distributed in a geometic pattern connected by roads and intertwined with agricultural landscapes and river drainages in the Upano Valley. Previous efforts have described mounds and large monuments in Amazonia, but the complexity and extent of this development far surpasses these previous sites. —Sacha Vignier

morganism

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Re: Archaeology/Paleontology news
« Reply #567 on: January 14, 2024, 10:50:07 PM »
(well, they were made out of bones....)


Mystery of 'tiny aliens' that were discovered in Peru is finally revealed

    The two 'aliens' took the world by storm in October
    Many claimed that they were proof of extraterrestrial life
    But scientists have revealed that they were made using modern materials
(...)
'They are not extraterrestrials; they are not aliens.'

Scientists told reporters that the three-fingered hands were 'very poorly' built, and were created with human bones, while the rest of the dolls' bodies were built with the bones of dogs, birds and other animals.

Peru's prosecutor's office has not yet figured out who the dolls belong to.

Officials only said that a Mexican citizen was the intended recipient of the dolls, but did not name them.

Mexico's Congress was the subject of ridicule last year after UFO enthusiast Jaime Maussan held court several times to prove that the mummified remains were of extraterrestrial origin.

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-12961431/Mystery-tiny-aliens-discovered-Peru-finally-revealed.html

morganism

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Re: Archaeology/Paleontology news
« Reply #568 on: January 17, 2024, 06:41:32 PM »
Using urban pasts to speak to urban presents in the Anthropocene

With more people now living in urban areas than outside of them, urbanism is becoming an increasingly important socioeconomic and ecological arena for our species in the twenty-first century. Understanding historical and regional variation in urban trajectories and land use has the potential to provide long-term perspectives on pressing contemporary challenges. Here we review how novel methods and approaches are enabling archeology to shed new light on the past 5,500 years of urban life. From exploring urban variability in ‘extreme’ environments to studying the interaction of urbanism and the Earth system, we argue that the past provides a critical, growing reservoir of knowledge for contemporary urban scientists and planners.

https://www.nature.com/articles/s44284-023-00014-4


morganism

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Re: Archaeology/Paleontology news
« Reply #569 on: January 22, 2024, 07:02:00 AM »
Why George Washington's Statue in London Doesn't Touch British Soil

Outside the National Gallery in London sits the strangest statue in Trafalgar Square, or maybe all of England. It's not bizarre because of its design or composition, but instead for whom the statue honors.

It is a replica, one of 25 or more, spread around the world. But it seems strange only in London, considering who it is and where the statue is placed.

It's a statue of George Washington, onetime citizen of Great Britain, father of the United States and rebellious colonial. In a square that marks one of Britain's greatest victories stands a reminder of one of its greatest defeats.

Washington's statue is not only there, but it's resplendent with symbols of authority, like the 13 wooden rods on which he leans (also a symbol of the 13 colonies). It's just hanging out in a square owned by the crown -- and built on soil shipped in from the state of Virginia.
The original George Washington statue in the Virginia State Capitol in Richmond. (Albert Herring)

The statue was presented to the British as a gift in 1921, when relations between the United States and the United Kingdom were much, much better than they had been in 1783. It's an exact replica of an original statue commissioned by Thomas Jefferson, which can still be seen in the Virginia State Capitol building in Richmond.

In fact, 25 casts of the statue have been made and spread all over the world, from the Washington Monument in Washington, D.C., to Lima, Peru and, of course, London's Trafalgar Square.

Because legend has it that George Washington once swore he would never set foot on British soil ever again, the erectors of the Trafalgar Square statue laid it on a foundation of Virginia soil to ensure that Washington did not tell a lie.

But the idea that the commander in chief of the Continental Army is somehow unwelcome in London is the real fiction. Washington was actually well-respected by the British people -- and by one very important British person in particular.

According to author and researcher Edward J. Larson, no less than King George III himself, whose land forces Washington spent seven years evading and killing, came to admire and respect the American leader.

That respect came after the American colonies were granted independence, and Washington, the head of the Continental Army, ceded his power and resigned rather than take the country by force. The king called Washington "the greatest man of the age."

The British prime minister at the time of American independence, William Petty, 1st Marquess of Lansdowne, even commissioned a life-size portrait of the first president during Washington's last year in office.

That portrait has become one of the most iconic of our first president. A copy was hung in the East Room of the White House at the end of John Adams' presidency, where it remains today. The original is owned by the U.S. National Portrait Gallery.

Lansdowne called Washington "the Greatest Man Living."

Washington is one of six American presidents who have statues or memorials in London. The others are Presidents Abraham Lincoln, Franklin D. Roosevelt, Dwight D. Eisenhower, John F. Kennedy and Ronald Reagan.

https://www.military.com/history/george-washington-statue-london-british-soil.html


vox_mundi

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Re: Archaeology/Paleontology news
« Reply #570 on: January 29, 2024, 05:37:48 PM »
Storegga Slide: Huge Tsunami With 20 Meter Waves May Have Wiped Out Stone Age Communities In Northumberland
https://phys.org/news/2024-01-huge-tsunami-meter-stone-age.html



An enormous tsunami with gigantic waves reaching 20 meters submerged large parts of northern Europe and may have wiped out populations of people in Stone Age Britain, a new University of York study has discovered.

The research focuses on a tsunami that hit Britain and northern Europe about 8,000 years ago. The authors think the waves were so huge and the number of deaths were so high that it may have led to a massive dip in Stone Age Britain's population.

Researchers believe the tsunami, which hit the eastern coast of the U.K. particularly hard, was caused by an underwater landslide known as the Storegga slide near Norway and coincides with a time when there was a large population decline in northern Britain.

Dr. Jon Hill, an environmental scientist at the University of York who led the research, said although northern Britain had a small population of about 1,000 people at this time, the consequences of the Storegga tsunami were severe.

"A giant tsunami of this size would have devastated Stone Age coastal communities as it occurred in the autumn, when they would have been gathering resources for the winter. The scale of the waves coming in would have been completely different to anything experienced by the people living there—a truly terrifying experience," he said.

Previous archaeological studies suggested that the number of sites inhabited across northwest Europe suddenly plummeted around this time, linked to a rapid and sustained drop in temperatures across the continent.

But the research, published in the Journal of Quaternary Science, blames the tsunami for this massive population decline.

Dr. Hill added, "Some past fishing societies in tsunami-prone regions such as the northern Pacific have shown some resilience to tsunamis and knew about moving to higher ground. But the tsunami event in northern Britain was more of a freak event, with Stone Age people here having no living memory or ancestral knowledge about how to make themselves safe."

The massive landslide off the coast of western Norway displaced 2,400–3,200 cubic km of sediment, and may have triggered waves reaching heights of between three and six meters in northern England, according to the study. This created monster waves of more than 20 meters in places, battering Northumberland, the Shetland Islands and much of northern Britain.

Patrick D Sharrocks et al, Evaluating the impact of the Storegga tsunami on Mesolithic communities in Northumberland, Journal of Quaternary Science (2023)
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/jqs.3586
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kassy

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Re: Archaeology/Paleontology news
« Reply #571 on: January 30, 2024, 02:13:10 PM »
New research challenges hunter-gatherer narrative


The oft-used description of early humans as "hunter-gatherers" should be changed to "gatherer-hunters," at least in the Andes of South America, according to groundbreaking research led by a University of Wyoming archaeologist.

Archaeologists long thought that early human diets were meat based.

However, Assistant Professor Randy Haas' analysis of the remains of 24 individuals from the Wilamaya Patjxa and Soro Mik'aya Patjxa burial sites in Peru shows that early human diets in the Andes Mountains were composed of 80 percent plant matter and 20 percent meat.

The study, titled "Stable isotope chemistry reveals plant-dominant diet among early foragers on the Andean Altiplano," has been published by the peer-reviewed journal PLOS ONE. It applies methods in isotope chemistry and statistical modeling to unveil a surprising twist in early Andean societies and traditional hunter-gatherer narratives.

"Conventional wisdom holds that early human economies focused on hunting -- an idea that has led to a number of high-protein dietary fads such as the Paleodiet," Haas says.

"Our analysis shows that the diets were composed of 80 percent plant matter and 20 percent meat."

For these early humans of the Andes, spanning from 9,000 to 6,500 years ago, there is indeed evidence that hunting of large mammals provided some of their diets.

But the new analysis of the isotopic composition of the human bones shows that plant foods made up the majority of individual diets, with meat playing a secondary role.

Additionally, burnt plant remains from the sites and distinct dental-wear patterns on the individuals' upper incisors indicate that tubers -- or plants that grow underground, such as potatoes -- likely were the most prominent subsistence resource.

"Our combination of isotope chemistry, paleoethnobotanical and zooarchaeological methods offers the clearest and most accurate picture of early Andean diets to date," Haas says.

"These findings update our understanding of earliest forager economies and the pathway to agricultural economies in the Andean highlands."

...

https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2024/01/240124164559.htm
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gerontocrat

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Re: Archaeology/Paleontology news
« Reply #572 on: January 30, 2024, 03:59:10 PM »
New research challenges hunter-gatherer narrative

Archaeologists long thought that early human diets were meat based.

"Conventional wisdom holds that early human economies focused on hunting -- an idea that has led to a number of high-protein dietary fads such as the Paleodiet," Haas says.

Reading some papers found from searched using scholar.google shows that most papers looked at specific regions at specific times, with some saying mostly meat-based, and others saying mostly plant-based

But one paper (see below) looking at contemporary hunter-gatherer populations states "hunter-gatherers consume high fractions of meat in regions where growing seasons are short".

In other words, in regions where plant growth is good, plant-based diets are the obvious easy choice (in the past send out the women and children to forage and today to plant and harvest) plus meat when you could get it ( hunting a man thing).

So what you ate depended on where you lived, and, of course, the population that that region could support.

https://www.nature.com/articles/s41559-021-01548-3
Quote
Global hunter-gatherer population densities constrained by influence of seasonality on diet composition
Dan Zhu, Eric D. Galbraith, Victoria Reyes-García & Philippe Ciais
Nature Ecology & Evolution volume 5, pages1536–1545 (2021)Cite this article

Abstract
The dependence of hunter-gatherers on local net primary production (NPP) to provide food played a major role in shaping long-term human population dynamics. Observations of contemporary hunter-gatherers have shown an overall correlation between population density and annual NPP but with a 1,000-fold variation in population density per unit NPP that remains unexplained. Here, we build a process-based hunter-gatherer population model embedded within a global terrestrial biosphere model, which explicitly addresses the extraction of NPP through dynamically allocated hunting and gathering activities. The emergent results reveal a strong, previously unrecognized effect of seasonality on population density via diet composition, whereby hunter-gatherers consume high fractions of meat in regions where growing seasons are short, leading to greatly reduced population density due to trophic inefficiency. This seasonal carnivory bottleneck largely explains the wide variation in population density per unit NPP and questions the prevailing usage of annual NPP as the proxy of carrying capacity for ancient humans. Our process-based approach has the potential to greatly refine our understanding of dynamical responses of ancient human populations to past environmental changes.
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kassy

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Re: Archaeology/Paleontology news
« Reply #573 on: January 31, 2024, 08:08:45 PM »
The simple problem in the historical record is that you can find tools used to butcher and you find marks from butchering on bone but we have no fossil leeks or onions with cut marks. This is sort of similar to how we build. We find the monumental buildings but not the houses that were made out of wood or other simple materials.

We would have probably eaten all the relatively easy to get fruits and leaves and tubers but you can´t see that.
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morganism

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Re: Archaeology/Paleontology news
« Reply #574 on: February 07, 2024, 10:14:52 PM »
Puzzling prehistoric artifacts served a practical purpose: ropemaking
Once thought to be ritual wands or scepters, archaeologists crafted cords using replicas of the ancient tools

 “Ritualism was something they used to ascribe everything to,” says Wei Chu, an archaeologist at Leiden University.

In a new paper out today in Science Advances, researchers suggest the tools were used for a more prosaic purpose: to make rope.
(snip)
The team next turned to historic depictions of ropemaking. In the Middle Ages, ropemakers used blocks of wood with similar-size drilled holes. By pulling fibers through adjacent holes, artisans working in teams of three or four were able to maintain tension on the fibers while braiding them into multistrand ropes. With a little practice, the archaeologists found their replica tool “works very efficiently and quickly to make thick cords with very little effort,” Rots says.

The researchers managed to fashion 5 meters of rope in about 10 minutes with their replica batons. For fiber, they used everything from flax and hemp to cattail reeds—all plants that would have grown near the Hohle Fels and Geissenklösterle caves 30,000 years ago. The ropes proved capable of supporting the weight of one of the team’s larger members. Reeds made the strongest rope fiber.

Chu cautions that the case isn’t closed for all such objects. The ivory examples are quite rare; perforated batons found elsewhere are typically made from antler and only have single holes, making them unlikely candidates for ropemaking. “It’s really an exciting time to be studying this stuff,” he says.

The find is more evidence the “cave man” designation applied to people in the past underestimates their innovative capacities. “People back then weren’t stupid,” Conard says. “They knew how to do all kinds of things.”

https://www.science.org/content/article/puzzling-prehistoric-artifacts-served-practical-purpose-ropemaking

kassy

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Re: Archaeology/Paleontology news
« Reply #575 on: March 19, 2024, 06:05:49 PM »
Migration of hominins out of Africa may have been driven by the first major glaciation of the Pleistocene


...

In their study, reported in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Giovanni Muttonia and Dennis Kent more accurately dated the onset of the first major Pleistocene ice age and compared it with genetic evidence of a hominin population bottleneck described in prior research efforts.

Prior research has shown that a major migration of hominins out of Africa occurred sometime between 1.1 and 0.9 million years ago. Research has also suggested that there was a hominin population bottleneck (drop in numbers) roughly around the same time that triggered the migration. In this new study, the researchers sought to better explain the timing and reason for the migration.

The team began by studying shifts in oxygen isotopes (found in rock sediment layers), which allowed them to see that the first major Pleistocene began approximately 900,000 years ago. They turned their attention to the results of prior studies that showed a population bottleneck approximately 200,000 years earlier. In that work, the team found that the results were not reliable—it is possible, they note, that population numbers were higher but there were areas where they were not being counted.

They then pointed out that evidence in past research showed hominin habitation all across Eurasia started approximately 900,000 years ago, which coincides with the onset of the first Pleistocene ice age. As the ice age began, ocean levels would have dropped, allowing hominins an easier route from Africa. Also, conditions in Africa would have become more difficult for the hominins living there, making migration a tempting proposition. And the researchers note that many animals also began migrating out of Africa around the same time.

The team suggests that the true reason for the migration was climate change—and it happened approximately 0.9 million years ago.

https://phys.org/news/2024-03-migration-hominins-africa-driven-major.html

Hominin population bottleneck coincided with migration from Africa during the Early Pleistocene ice age transition
https://www.pnas.org/doi/10.1073/pnas.2318903121
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Sigmetnow

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Re: Archaeology/Paleontology news
« Reply #576 on: March 19, 2024, 06:58:34 PM »
Amid a drought in recent years, the Dinosaur Valley State Park in Texas discovered dinosaur footprints that were historically covered by water and sediment. Experts dated them back to 113 million years ago.
3/17/24, https://x.com/historyinmemes/status/1769491904583102580
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