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

In the 5th century AD, the Germanic elite in southwest Germany adorned the hilts of their swords with a thin layer of gold foil. These embellished hilts transformed the swords into prestigious symbols, effectively conveying the elevated status of their owners.

Photo: Landesmuseum Württemberg

#archaeology

Rome_and_stuff, to philosophy
@Rome_and_stuff@mastodon.social avatar

An sarcophagus with traces of paint on the banqueting scene.

image/png
image/png

archeaids, to Archaeology
@archeaids@mastodon.online avatar

Found another of my sample flakes of the lavender-gray & red Alibates flint from the Texas Panhandle. This one has an old patinated cleavage surface (human or natural breakage) & what looks like original cortex. #Archaeology #rocks

TarkabarkaHolgy, to philosophy
@TarkabarkaHolgy@ohai.social avatar

Today's #MythologyMonday is celebrating #InternationalMuseumDay with talk about mythological art in museums :)

One of my favorite museums in the world is the Villa Giulia in Rome. It houses the National Etruscan Museum. It falls outside most quick tour routes, and it is a lovely, peaceful, elegant museum with a very rich collection.

See the pretty vases below, with various mythological scenes :) Recongize them?

#Rome #Museum #mythology #Etruscan #Archaeology

Vibracobra23, to Archaeology
@Vibracobra23@mastodon.social avatar

#576 W.H.K. Wright (ed) - The Western Antiquary; or, Devon and Cornwall Note-Book: Vol I, March, 1881, to March, 1882. Latimer & Son, Plymouth, 1882, 1st edition. #WHKWright #WesternAntiquary #Cornwall #Devon #Archaeology #History #Genealogy #Folklore #BookOfTheDay

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

Apparently it's : a beautiful intaglio depicting a bee. From Syria.
1st to 3rd century AD
🐝🐝🐝

Photo: Yale University Art Gallery.


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

A very stylish #Roman enclosed boot with a highly decorative and intricate cut-out design that would have shown off the wearer’s socks.

Found in London, dating c. 75-125 AD.

From the collections at the Museum of London.

📸 taken by me

#RomanArchaeology #Archaeology

auditoryJoel, to science
@auditoryJoel@neuromatch.social avatar

From a Wash Post article on evidence humans were in N. America earlier than previously thought. I myself have a mixed-feelings middle-ground view on peer review, but I'm in a very different field.

"The peer-review process is designed to help validate scientific claims, but Lowery argues that in archaeology it often leads to a circle-the-wagon mentality, allowing scientists to wave away evidence that doesn’t support the dominant paradigm. He says he isn’t seeking formal publishing routes because “life’s too short,” comparing this aspect of academic science to “the dumbest game I’ve ever played.”"

https://www.washingtonpost.com/science/2024/05/19/first-americans-chesapeake-parsons-island/

Vibracobra23, to Archaeology
@Vibracobra23@mastodon.social avatar

#575 Frank Stevens and Heywood Sumner - Stonehenge Today & Yesterday. His Majesty's Stationery Office, London, 1929, 1st edition, revised, with fold-out plan. #FrankStevens #HeywoodSumner #HMSO #Stonehenge #Archaeology #Megaliths #StandingStoneSunday #BookOfTheDay

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

#StandingStoneSunday a #Neolithic human-shaped stela with a necklace and a belt, carved in limestone. Found in Montagnac, #France. Dating 3200-2400 BC. In the late neolithic period several cultures living between the Atlantic Ocean and the Caucasus erected human-shaped stone sculptures showing clothing, weapons and jewellery. The stelae were symbols of power and status and were used for ancestor worship and rituals.

On display at Musée d'Histoire Naturelle, Nîmes

📸 mine

#archaeology

clarebee, to random
@clarebee@mastodon.green avatar

Callanish Stones for

clarebee,
@clarebee@mastodon.green avatar

This one in particular feels like a cross-section of wood - the layers of Lewissian Gneiss so distinct.

Feeling a kind of kinship with the Neolithic people who hefted this into place, 5000 years ago.

evelynefoerster, to history
@evelynefoerster@swiss.social avatar


Found at last: long-lost branch of the Nile that ran by the pyramids 🤓
https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-024-01449-y

megalithic, to Archaeology
@megalithic@archaeo.social avatar

Ever wondered how you date a standing stone? This one fell down.
Excavation of the stone hole yielded organic material that was dated to 1090BCE +/-100years #StandingStoneSunday (and then it was re-erected. )

That’s late Bronze Age. A fairly typical date for many single stones. So nothing like as ancient as much that we share on here. But why though? What were they for?

Photo by @megportal member Horatio, with permission. More
https://www.megalithic.co.uk/article.php?sid=15045 #archaeology

arturoviaggia, to photography
@arturoviaggia@zirk.us avatar

Remains of a triconch room in a 4th cent. Roman villa in Patti Marina, #Sicily. The room is comprised of three curved apses and a mosaic floor decorated with geometric patterns and animals.

📷🇮🇹 https://flic.kr/p/2gYUAsz

#photography
#archaeology

@humanities @photography @archaeodons @materialculture

Xucaen, to egypt
@Xucaen@mastodon.social avatar

Is there an Egyptologist in the house? I'm looking for information about the attached glyph. I did a reverse image search and I found indication it is related to the god Ra. Where's a good resource of information for this sort of thing?

#Egypt #Egyptology #archaeology

Fornvannen, to Archaeology
@Fornvannen@archaeo.social avatar

#openaccess
Nicklasson, P: "Kvinnor i eller utanför arkeologin : kongresserna i förhistorisk arkeologi och antropologi 1867–1906." [Women In or Out of Archaeology: The Congresses in Prehistoric Archaeology and Anthropology 1867–1906.]
Swe/Engl sum
Pictured; Ida Pfeiffer and Clémence Royer
#Archaeology #Anthropology #History #WomensHistory
@archaeodons
https://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:raa:diva-8424

Clémence Royer (1830–1902) was Darwin’s French translator. She participated in several archaeological congresses. Photo: Félix Nadar 1865

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

For #RomanSiteSaturday the aqueduct of Segovia/#Spain. It was built in the late 1st/early 2nd c. AD and supplied water to the city until the mid 19th century. It's one of the best-preserved #Roman aqueducts and an impressive work of engineering.

#RomanArchaeology #archaeology

archeaids, to Archaeology
@archeaids@mastodon.online avatar

Fun find!

Unusually large brown striped chalcedony split-cobble core from an archaeological site (recorded) in north Vernon Parish, Louisiana, & a flake from an almost identical material I flintknapped from a west-central LA Citronelle gravel cobble. Same geologic source? #Archaeology

archeaids, to Archaeology
@archeaids@mastodon.online avatar

#Flintknapping work in progress. Silicified sandstone (aka quartzitic sandstone, quartzite) from eastern Maryland. #Archaeology

archaeology, to Archaeology
@archaeology@mstdn.social avatar

Ancient coins solve early medieval money mystery

A comprehensive analysis of 49 silver coins spanning the 7th and 8th centuries CE, revealed the cross-channel connections that shaped early medieval Europe’s economy...

More information: https://archaeologymag.com/2024/04/ancient-coins-solve-early-medieval-money-mystery/

Follow @archaeology

#archaeology #medieval #numismatics

Rome_and_stuff, to philosophy
@Rome_and_stuff@mastodon.social avatar

A selection of the tombs in the remarkable necropolis of the via triumphalis in .

image/png
image/png
image/png

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

Fascinating world of ancient #glass:
A #Roman glass bottle shaped like a date: dates, figs, and honey were New Year's gifts in Roman times. According to Ovid, they should make the new year a sweet one.

On display at Pompejanum Aschaffenburg.

#RomanArchaeology #archaeology

archeaids, to Cats
@archeaids@mastodon.online avatar

It'l Bit declined to help flintknap, electing instead to watch. #Flintknapping #Cats #Archaeology

archeaids, to Archaeology
@archeaids@mastodon.online avatar

Blue-gray & tan novaculite with black manganese dendrites & round black dot from the Cossatot River Basin of Arkansas. #rocks #Archaeology

slaettaratindur, to random French
@slaettaratindur@piaille.fr avatar

Le menhir d'Ussano à Cavallino di Lecce, en Italie. On trouve une tripotée de menhirs dans la province de Lecce, tout au bout des Pouilles. De façon intéressante, beaucoup ont été resculptés par la suite en forme de colonne.

#StandingStoneSunday

(Photo par Fabrizio Garrisi : https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Menhir_di_Ussano_a_Cavallino_di_Lecce_-FG07.jpg)

jqjacobs,
@jqjacobs@archaeo.social avatar

@slaettaratindur
Lorsque l'UNESCO a annoncé l'ajout des Deer Stones en Mongolie à la liste des sites du patrimoine mondial, j'ai mis à jour le dossier Mongolie et enregistré un fichier KML distinct.
Fichier Google Earth — jqjacobs.net/kml/mongolia.kml
Photo share on #Panoramio by John Stampfl
https://web.archive.org/web/20161025030907/http:/www.panoramio.com/photo/72728960
#Archéologie #Mongolia #DeerStones #UNESCO #Archaeology

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