jake4480, to history
@jake4480@c.im avatar
Vibracobra23, to photography
@Vibracobra23@mastodon.social avatar

#596 Eliza Sackett and Julia Skinner (eds) - Ancient Britain: Land of Mystery and Legend. The Francis Frith Collection, Salisbury, 2006, 1st edition. #ElizaSackett #JuliaSkinner #FrancisFrith #Photography #Archaeology #Stonehenge #StandingStoneSunday #BookOfTheDay

archeaids, to Archaeology
@archeaids@mastodon.online avatar

Poverty Point (ca. 1750-850 BC) trade material source locations adapted from Jon Gibson's 1996 figure for my recent talk.

archeaids, to Archaeology
@archeaids@mastodon.online avatar

Was gone Thursday & Friday giving a talk to a Rotary Club venue, visiting friends & meeting curation people at Ft. Johnson.

Here is a poster I designed to help laypeople understand the depth of time of Indigenous history in the area. Except for my reproduction pots of certain cultures & our modern metate & mano, everything consists of provenienced artifacts.

Gave a few copies to the Ft. Johnson curation staff & the local archaeology society branch president.

Vibracobra23, to Archaeology
@Vibracobra23@mastodon.social avatar

Gardom's Edge Stone, a menhir at Gardom's Edge near Baslow on the Peak District in Derbyshire. Photographed on 8 June 1997.

Vibracobra23, to Archaeology
@Vibracobra23@mastodon.social avatar

#595 Les Douch (ed) - Cornwall Archaeological Society Newsletter No 84. Cornwall Archaeological Society, Truro, June 1997. #Cornwall #Kernow #Archaeology #CornwallArchaeologicalSociety #BookOfTheDay

ninawillburger, (edited ) to random
@ninawillburger@social.anoxinon.de avatar

An aerial view of the pyramid of Gaius Cestius in Rome, a tomb built in the late 1st century BC. It was incorporated into the Aurelian Walls in the late 3rd century AD. According to an inscription the tomb was completed in 330 days!

Photo: Valentino Ligori

#Archaeology #RomanArchaeology

Rome_and_stuff, to philosophy
@Rome_and_stuff@mastodon.social avatar

The portico of the #roman sanctuary of #herucles at Tivoli, outside of #rome. The temple complex was converted to a number of other uses after antiquity. Here we see the remains of the #ancient colonnade in opus incertum to the right and the #ruins of a modern paper mill to the left, with its iron roof. A blend of classical and industrial #archaeology. #ancienthistory #romanempire #ancientarchitecture #architecturalhistory #industrialarcheology #industrialarchitecture #heritage #restoration

ninawillburger, to Archaeology
@ninawillburger@social.anoxinon.de avatar

For an elaborate Greek gold hairnet with garnet inlays, dating from the 3rd century BC, an older medallion of Medusa was reused in the centre.
From Taras (Tarento, Italy).

On display at Altes Museum, Berlin.

📷 taken by me

shekinahcancook, to Archaeology
@shekinahcancook@babka.social avatar

The Most Lavish Mesopotamian Tomb Ever Found Belongs to a Woman - And her clothing tells an important story, says archeologist Rita Wright, by Sarah Durn February 10, 2022

"...Archeologist and textile expert Rita Wright, professor emerita of anthropology at New York University, is the first to ever study Pu-abi’s garments based on the only surviving image of her. Her findings have just been published in the new book Art/ifacts and ArtWorks in the Ancient World. Atlas Obscura spoke to Wright about the role of women in ancient Ur, what we know of Queen Pu-abi’s life, and why textiles are so often overlooked in archeology.."

Textiles are overlooked because they are "women's" handiwork, of course. The modern science of archaeology began in the days where the only things considered to be of value were gold and jewels, or weaponry. Anything women did was considered uninteresting, not important, or presumed to be part of a "fertility cult."

https://www.atlasobscura.com/articles/ur-queen-puabi-mesopotamia-textiles

ninawillburger, to philosophy
@ninawillburger@social.anoxinon.de avatar

A bust of the #Roman Emperor Marcus Aurelius, hammered from a single sheet of gold. The bust (weight ca. 1590grams) was found in 1939 in a sewer in front of the so-called Sanctuaire du Cigognier in Aventicum (Avenches, Switzerland). Dating 170/180 AD.

📷AVENTICUM - Site et Musée romains d'Avenches

#RomanArchaeology #Archaeology

image/jpeg

Vibracobra23, to Archaeology
@Vibracobra23@mastodon.social avatar

S.H.M. Pollard (ed) - Devon Archaeological Society Proceedings No 31. Devon Archaeological Society, 1973.

evelynefoerster, to history
@evelynefoerster@swiss.social avatar

#knowledge #wissen #history #Geschichte #wissenschaft #science #archaeology
The animal could represent an extinct branch of a wider group including spiders, whip spiders and whip scorpions.
2/2

evelynefoerster, to history
@evelynefoerster@swiss.social avatar

#knowledge #wissen #history #Geschichte #wissenschaft #science #archaeology
Researchers have named the specimen Douglassarachne acanthopoda, but it is unclear which living creatures it is most closely related to. “The fossil’s very spiny legs are reminiscent of some modern harvestmen, but its body plan is quite different,” said study co-author Jason Dunlop, a palaeontologist at the Natural History Museum in Berlin, in a statement.
1/2

salvomic, to architecture Italian
@salvomic@flipboard.social avatar

Carthage, L'amphithéâtre romain 🇹🇳

:flipboard: @Flipboard @flipboard @viewfinderCurator

salvomic, to architecture
@salvomic@pixelfed.social avatar

Carthage, L'amphithéâtre romain 🇹🇳

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