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Challenging prehistoric gender roles: Research finds that women were hunters, too

UNIVERSITY OF DELAWARE—It’s a familiar story to many of us: In prehistoric times, men were hunters and women were gatherers. Women were not physically capable of hunting because their anatomy was different from men. And because men were hunters, they drove human evolution.

But that story’s not true, according to research by University of Delaware anthropology professor Sarah Lacy, which was recently published in Scientific American and in two papers in the journal American Anthropologist

Lacy and her colleague Cara Ocobock from the University of Notre Dame examined the division of labor according to sex during the Paleolithic era, approximately 2.5 million to 12,000 years ago. Through a review of current archaeological evidence and literature, they found little evidence to support the idea that roles were assigned specifically to each sex. The team also looked at female physiology and found that women were not only physically capable of being hunters, but that there is little evidence to support that they were not hunting.

Lacy is a biological anthropologist who studies the health of early humans, and Ocobock is a physiologist who makes analogies between modern day and the fossil record. Friends in graduate school, they collaborated after “complaining about a number of papers that had come out that used this default null hypothesis that cavemen had strong gendered division of labor, the males hunt, females gather things. We were like, ‘Why is that the default? We have so much evidence that that’s not the case,’” Lacy said.

The researchers found examples of equality for both sexes in ancient tools, diet, art, burials and anatomy. 

“People found things in the past and they just automatically gendered them male and didn’t acknowledge the fact that everyone we found in the past has these markers, whether in their bones or in stone tools that are being placed in their burials. We can’t really tell who made what, right? We can’t say, ‘Oh, only males flintknap,’ because there’s no signature left on the stone tool that tells us who made it,” Lacy said, referring to the method by which stone tools were made. “But from what evidence we do have, there appears to be almost no sex differences in roles.” 

The team also examined the question of whether anatomical and physiological differences between men and women prevented women from hunting. They found that men have an advantage over women in activities requiring speed and power, such as sprinting and throwing, but that women have an advantage over men in activities requiring endurance, such as running. Both sets of activities were essential to hunting in ancient times.

The team highlighted the role of the hormone estrogen, which is more prominent in women than men, as a key component in conferring that advantage. Estrogen can increase fat metabolism, which gives muscles a longer-lasting energy source and can regulate muscle breakdown, preventing muscles from wearing down. Scientists have traced estrogen receptors, proteins that direct the hormone to the right place in the body, back to 600 million years ago

“When we take a deeper look at the anatomy and the modern physiology and then actually look at the skeletal remains of ancient people, there’s no difference in trauma patterns between males and females, because they’re doing the same activities,” Lacy said.

During the Paleolithic era, most people lived in small groups. To Lacy, the idea that only part of the group would hunt didn’t make sense. 

“You live in such a small society. You have to be really, really flexible,” she said. “Everyone has to be able to pick up any role at any time. It just seems like the obvious thing, but people weren’t taking it that way.” 

Man the Hunter

The theory of men as hunters and women as gatherers first gained notoriety in 1968, when anthropologists Richard B. Lee and Irven DeVore published Man the Hunter, a collection of scholarly papers presented at a symposium in 1966. The authors made the case that hunting advanced human evolution by adding meat to prehistoric diets, contributing to the growth of bigger brains, compared to our primate cousins. The authors assumed all hunters were male. 

Lacy points to that gender bias by previous scholars as a reason why the concept became widely accepted in academia, eventually spreading to popular culture. Television cartoons, feature films, museum exhibits and textbooks reinforced the idea. When female scholars published research to the contrary, their work was largely ignored or devalued.

“There were women who were publishing about this in the ’70s, ’80s and ’90s, but their work kept getting relegated to, ‘Oh, that’s a feminist critique or a feminist approach,’” Lacy said. “This was before any of the work on genetics and a lot of the work on physiology and the role of estrogen had come out. We wanted to both lift back up the arguments that they had already made and add to it all the new stuff.” 

Lacy said the “man the hunter” theory continues to influence the discipline. While she acknowledges that much more research needs to be done about the lives of prehistoric people — especially women — she hopes her view that labor was divided among both sexes will become the default approach for research in the future. 

For 3 million years, males and females both participated in subsistence gathering for their communities, and dependence on meat and hunting was driven by both sexes, Lacy said.

“It’s not something that only men did and that therefore male behavior drove evolution,” she said. “What we take as de facto gender roles today are not inherent, do not characterize our ancestors. We were a very egalitarian species for millions of years in many ways.”

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Article Source: UNIVERSITY OF DELAWARE news release.

Spread of early farmers may explain why Europeans have less Neanderthal ancestry than East Asians

AMERICAN ASSOCIATION FOR THE ADVANCEMENT OF SCIENCE (AAAS)—Modern humans outside of Africa can trace around 2% of their ancestry to Neanderthals, but this proportion varies geographically, with Europeans carrying slightly less of this ancestry than East Asians. Now, ancient DNA from the past 40,000 years suggests that this variation may be attributed to expansions of Neolithic farmers into Europe starting around 10,000 years ago, because these groups had less Neanderthal DNA than the hunter-gatherers who preceded them. For years, researchers have been debating when, where, and how often Neanderthals and Homo sapiens intermixed. Studies increasingly suggest that hybridization occurred in multiple waves, but it has been unclear why East Asian populations carry 8-24% more Neanderthal DNA than Western Europeans. A recent study*, authored by some researchers from the present study, proposed that spatial variations in Neanderthal ancestry could be explained by the various expansion ranges of early modern humans outside of Africa. To explore this hypothesis, Claudio S. Quilodrán and colleagues examined Neanderthal ancestry in 2,625 published human genomes from across Eurasia, ranging from about 40,000 years ago to the present day. In European DNA from around 40,000 years ago, they observed a prominent spatial gradient in Neanderthal ancestry that decreased from north to south. As hunter-gatherers continued spreading into Europe over the next 20,000 years, Neanderthal ancestry gradually declined. However, these earlier expansions still left European populations with more Neanderthal DNA than was present in East Asia during the same period. The DNA of early farmers in Europe, who started to arrive around 10,000 years ago, carried much less Neanderthal DNA than hunter-gatherers who already lived there, which may have contributed to the subsequent dilution of Neanderthal ancestry to present-day European levels. “This second range expansion is essential for explaining the pattern currently observed of lower [Neanderthal] ancestry in western Europe than in East Asia,” Quilodrán et al. write.

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Study reveals our European ancestors ate seaweed and freshwater plants

UNIVERSITY OF YORK—For many people seaweed holds a reputation as a superfood, heralded for its health benefits and sustainability, but it appears our European ancestors were ahead of the game and were consuming the nutrient-rich plant for thousands of years.

Researchers say they have found “definitive” archaeological evidence that seaweeds and other local freshwater plants were eaten in the mesolithic, through the Neolithic transition to farming and into the Early Middle Ages, suggesting that these resources, now rarely eaten in Europe, only became marginal much more recently.

The study*, published in Nature Communications, reveals that while aquatic resources were exploited, the archaeological evidence for seaweed is only rarely recorded and is almost always considered in terms of non-edible uses like fuel, food wrappings or fertilizers.

Historical accounts report laws related to collection of seaweed in Iceland, Brittany and Ireland dating to the 10th Century, while sea kale is mentioned by Pliny as a sailor’s anti-scurvy remedy.

By the 18th Century seaweed was considered as famine food, and although seaweed and freshwater aquatic plants continue to be economically important in parts of Asia, both nutritionally and medicinally, there is little consumption in Europe.

The team, led by archaeologists from the universities of Glasgow and York, examined biomarkers extracted from dental calculus from 74 individuals from 28 archaeological sites across Europe, from north Scotland to southern Spain, which revealed “direct evidence for widespread consumption of seaweed and submerged aquatic and freshwater plants.”

Samples where biomolecular evidence survived revealed consumption of red, green or brown seaweeds, or freshwater aquatic plants, with one sample from Orkney also containing evidence for a Brassica, most likely sea kale. 

There are approximately 10,000 different species of seaweeds in the world, however only 145 species are eaten today, principally in Asia. 

The researchers hope that their study will highlight the potential for including more seaweeds and other local freshwater plants in our diets today – helping Europeans to become healthier and more sustainable.

Karen Hardy,  Professor of Prehistoric Archaeology at the University of Glasgow and Principal Investigator of the Powerful Plants project, said: “Today, seaweed and freshwater aquatic plants are virtually absent from traditional, western diets and their marginalization as they gradually changed from food to famine resources and animal fodder, probably occurred over a long period of time, as has also been detected elsewhere with some plants.  

“Our study also highlights the potential for rediscovery of alternative, local, sustainable food resources that may contribute to addressing the negative health and environmental effects of over-dependence on a small number of mass-produced agricultural products that is a dominant feature of much of today’s western diet, and indeed the global long-distance food supply more generally.”

“It is very exciting to be able to show definitively that seaweeds and other local freshwater plants were eaten across a long period in our European past.”

Co-author on the paper, Dr Stephen Buckley, from the Department of Archaeology at the University of York, said “The bio-molecular evidence in this study is over three thousand years earlier than historical evidence in the Far East. 

“Not only does this new evidence show that seaweed was being consumed in Europe during the Mesolithic Period around 8,000 years ago when marine resources were known to have been exploited, but that it continued into the Neolithic when it is usually assumed that the introduction of farming led to the abandonment of marine dietary resources. 

“This strongly suggests that the nutritional benefits of seaweed were sufficiently well understood by these ancient populations that they maintained their dietary link with the sea.”

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The stone building is Isbister in Orkney, also known as Tomb of the Eagles where some of the seaweed samples analyzed in the study came from. Professor Karen Hardy

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Article Source: UNIVERSITY OF YORK news release.

Revealing a Medieval City in the Land of Fire

Bounded by the Caspian Sea and the Caucasus Mountains, Azerbaijan is a country squeezed between Europe and Asia. Its capital, Baku, is popularly known for a medieval walled Inner City, and among its most famous sites is Yanar Dağ (or “Burning Mountain“), a mountain near the Caspian Sea that features a natural glowing fire that has been ‘burning’ more than 65 years.  It is no wonder that many nick-name the country “the land of fire”. Among its treasures is another place known as “Medieval Agsu City”, where important archaeological investigations are being carried out………..

 

Created in 2019, the “Medieval Agsu City” State Historical-Cultural Reserve of the State Service of Cultural Heritage Conservation, Development and Rehabilitation under the Ministry of Culture of the Republic of Azerbaijan, is located in the Agsu district, Azerbaijan. In the 18th century, the medieval city of Agsu was the largest settlement in Azerbaijan in terms of population and territory. Built by Nadir Shah in May 1735 near the village of Agsu, Covering a 40-hectare area,.the fortress-city has long been the residence of rulers appointed by the Shah to the region – the Shirvan khans. The Agsu fortress is also considered to be the center of the revolts of Shirvan nobles against Nadir Shah. At various times, the Russian commander Count Valeryan Zubov and  Naibussaltana Abbas Mirza attacked and besieged the fortress. Some of them even captured the castle. Famous 18th century travelers Samuel Gmelin, Bieberstein, Bronevsky and others have reported on the fortress. During the reign of the Shirvan khans, Agsu crafts, trade and culture developed to a high level.

Archaeological Excavations: What They Have Revealed

The first archaeological exploration work in the area was carried out in 1983 by the Agsu-Ismayilli expedition. More recently, however, the joint Agsu Archaeological Expedition has been conducting excavations of the medieval city through the Institute of Archaeology and Ethnography of ANAS and the National History Museum of Azerbaijan.

Despite being built in a short time, the most perfect urban planning of its time was applied. Stone-paved streets and roads, water and sewer lines, handicraft workshops, etc. discovered during the excavations tell the story of a modern progressive urban culture for its time. The interior and exterior walls, floors, roofs, as well as ovens and hearths of the houses in Shirvan were painted with a solution made of special rock called “juice”. This paint solution not only beautified houses, but also protected them from rain. One of the most interesting workshops in the city is a paint shop. The paint dusts found here were studied by an employee of Marmara University in Turkey. It turned out that the painting material was obtained from the madder (Latin “Rubia Tinctorium L”). Because the production and export of madder is one of the main events of the 18th century, this historical period is sometimes called the “Madder century”.

During the research, large public buildings with interesting architectural solutions – underground baths, the Juma Mosque, and ice house – were discovered in the area. There are large cemetery remains on 3 sides of the city.

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“Medieval Agsu City” State Historical-Cultural Reserve

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Bath complex, 4th excavation site.

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Mosque (Juma Mosque)

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Storage (ice storage)

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Handicraft quarter

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The reserve features 19 historical monuments. All of them are of local importance. Three of them are architectural monuments, while others are archaeological monuments. These monuments include the “Ancient Bath Complex”, the “Juma Mosque”, the “Main Square”, the “Buzkhana (ice house)”, and the “Handicrafts Quarter”, as well as other monuments in the area. 

The remains of magnificent medieval buildings were uncovered while exploring the tomb in the Shikhmezid neighborhood of Agsu city, based on oral information of local residents received by the leadership of the Agsu archaeological expedition in 2012. At that time, preliminary archaeological excavations were carried out there in order to save the monument. Thus, the remains of a magnificent rectangular building built towards Mecca, using large accurate minestones, were discovered. The building consists of a large hall covering an area of about 400 square meters and a large number of relatively small rooms.

Fine tile patterns decorated with geometric and floral elements prevail among the finds revealed during the excavations. Architectural features, construction in the direction of  Mecca, decoration with colored tiles and the existence of rooms around which hearth remains were found, increase the likelihood that the building is a mosque or the madrasah part of khangah.

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Above and below: The Shikhmezid excavations

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Although the people within the graves found in this area were buried according to Islamic rules, i.e. over the right shoulder and towards Mecca, more interesting facts emerged. Most of the graves were covered with 4, 6 or 8 jars. Such a burial custom has not yet been found in any Muslim country. Anthropological research revealed that the skull samples, which undoubtedly belonged to Muslims, are particular to the “Caspian” anthropological type, which represents local Azerbaijanis.

According to elderly residents of the region, the khangah and the tomb in the Shikhmezid neighborhood were destroyed as part of measures taken by the Soviet regime in the 1930s. The analysis of the finds displayed in the upper layer during the preliminary research shows that the Shikhmezid khangah complex, Shikhmezid tomb, Narli pir, and graves with jar covering, belong to the XIII-XVII centuries. They constitute a complex of monuments that have no analogues in the world.

During 2 years under the guidance of archaeologist Professor Gafar Jabiyev, the head of the Agsu Archaeological Expedition, a large number of finds were discovered as a result of excavations conducted in the area surrounded by the village of Shikhmezid (Sheikhmezid) of the Agsu district. The expedition, sent to the Shamakhi region by the Azerbaijan Learning and Research Society, under the leadership of Jamil Aleksandrovich Nasifi, visited Agsu and collected information about the Shikhmezid tomb and the remains of ancient mosques around it. As a result of archaeological research, the use of the Shikhmezid khanate as a yard was prevented, taken under the control of the Ministry of Culture, and prepared as a protection zone. It was included in the “Medieval Agsu City” State Historical-Cultural Reserve. Exhibition of the finds includes octagonal, cross-shaped tiles, glazed wall decorations, parts of pottery, vessels with botanical, geometric and celestial patterns, all found in the mosque-madrasa part of the Shikhmezid khanagh. 

The Shikhmezid Tomb 

Shikhmezid is a historical neighborhood in Agsu city. Shikhmezid was a separate village until the beginning of the 20th century and local intellectuals wrote about the presence of historical monuments there. Nasifi visited Agsu and collected information about the Shikhmezid Tomb and the remains of nearby ancient mosques. That information is reflected in Nasifi’s extensive article. The pomegranate tree in Shikhmezid Tomb was considered a sacred pilgrimage by local residents and the cemetery was called the  “Narli Pir” Cemetery. State figures of the Shirvan region, their family members and intellectuals were buried in the Narli Pir Cemetery.

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Above and below: The Shikhmezid Tomb

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Shikhmezid Khanghah

The main part of the Shikhmezid khanghah, i.e., the mosque-madrasa building, was discovered during the archaeological research conducted in 2012-2013. The building consists of a main hall and cells, looking like Khalwatiya dargah. The walls here were built of well-hewn limestone and slaked lime was used as a fixing mortar. Huge walls give the building a special look. Numerous baked brick moldings and turquoise tiles indicate that the building had a brick dome. It is evident from the pottery-ware and other objects found there that the building was in continuous use since its construction. Unfortunately, other remains of the building extend to the land to the east and north, which is now used as a yard.

The exhibition, “Shikhmezid khanghah in Medieval Agsu City” is open in the historic Juma mosque on the territory of the “Medieval Agsu City” State Historical-Cultural Reserve. The exhibition is dedicated to the 10th anniversary of the excavations.

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Above and below: Shikhmezid Khanghah

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Jar-shaped graves

One of the important results of the archaeological excavations are the graves covered with jars (pitchers), which were found in the cemetery built to the south and west of the mosque-madrasa. Such Muslim graves were not recorded in the archaeology of Azerbaijan so far. It is interesting that jars were used instead of birthstones for both men and women grave sites, as well as for both adults and children. After a grave well is dug, its edges are built with river stones or baked bricks. After placing the corpse in the chamber, well-hewn wood is laid on, and the jars are arranged on it in a zigzag form (the jar’s edge facing north and south respectively). The number of jars differs: 9, 8, 7, 4, etc. This number is related to whether the grave belongs to an adult or a child. All discovered skeletons were studied by an anthropologist and it was confirmed that they belong to the Caspian anthropological type of southern Europeans.

Monitoring revealed that the remains of the walls and bent parts of the khangah were etched, eroded, and moss was found in the stone part. Various types of weeds and shrubs were found in the khangah area, damaging the monument. The collapse and removal of stones are fixed in some parts of the walls, about two meters and in some about a meter, caused by anthropogenic impacts. The monument must be re-cleaned in order to restore the khangah as it was during archaeological excavations. The research should be continued on both the mosque and the tomb, and necessary restoration and conservation work should be carried out.  

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Above and below: Jar-shaped graves

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Excavating & Drawing in Oaxaca: Discussions with Archaeologist Guy Hepp

Editor’s Note: Following is an interview conducted by Richard Marranca of archaeologist Guy Hepp, who is Associate Professor of Anthropology at California State University, San Bernardino. Dr. Hepp has been involved in research related to the ancient people of Oaxaca, a atate in southwestern Mexico. Oaxaca has a rich history of human occupation going back as far as 11,000 years ago, though it is best known for the ancient  Zapotec and Mixtec civilizations……….

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Part 1

RM (Richard Marranca): Hello Guy. It’s been a few years since we first met in Oaxaca and did the interview. I take it you recently returned from Tututepec? Can you tell us about this place and the Mixtecs?

GH (Guy Hepp: It’s great to hear from you, Richard. Yes, I volunteered on a project at Tututepec in 2022, directed by my good friend Marc Levine from the University of Oklahoma. This was coming full circle, for me, as Marc’s dissertation project in Tututepec in 2005 was my first experience in Oaxaca. Tututepec is both an ancient site and a modern town on the western Pacific coast of Oaxaca. It was the capital of a coastal empire stretching from near the Guerrero border to roughly the Isthmus of Tehuantepec during the late Postclassic period (1100–1522 CE). It is still the county seat in the region (largely for symbolic reasons) and one can still hear Mixtec spoken there, particularly by the older residents. There’s much to tell about Tututepec, including its founding by the famous hero-king Lord 8-Deer “Jaguar Claw,” whose exploits are recorded in the preserved Mixtec codices, but I refer you to research by Marc and others for the details.

RM: Can you say a few things about the excavation and ongoing research?

GH: I don’t want to spill the beans on Marc’s project, as this is his research area and he was kind enough to have me join his project as a volunteer. In addition to helping with the excavations, my focus has been on the ceramic figurines from the site. As I discuss below, figurines have been a specialty of mine since my MA project, completed in 2007. Marc has a wonderful relationship with the modern Tututepec community and an ongoing collaboration with the Museo Yucusaa, the town’s community museum. His research questions focus in part on craft specialization at the household and neighborhood levels. Tututepec is a fascinating inversion of a familiar trend. Rather than a large modern city crowding around archaeological ruins, the modern town has dwindled due to a shift in the population out of the defensible piedmont and onto the coastal plain below, where the local stretch of the Pan-American highway was built. As a result, modern Tututepec is dwarfed and surrounded by the terraces and preserved foundations of its ancient footprint. Marc has excavated in different parts of the site with the hopes of better understanding the economic specializations among the different households and neighborhoods and how those factored into the local economy.

RM: Is your focus the ceramic figures? 

GH: I did a study of Formative period (2000 BCE – 250 CE) ceramic figurines from coastal Oaxaca for my MA thesis and have retained an interest in them in my subsequent work. Though an art history professor of mine would remind me that art need not directly mirror reality, I still find anthropomorphic (human-shaped) figurines one of our best ways to get a glimpse of how people in the past dressed and thought of the human body and identity. And yes, one of my favorite things about studying such figurines is that they give me an excuse to do scientific illustrations, which were my first entrée into professional archaeology when I was a high school student. Marc and I agreed that we would collaborate on a study of the Late Postclassic period figurines from Tututepec, as these are poorly understood but show some indications of widespread interactions and shared practices in Mesoamerica in the last few centuries before the arrival of the Spanish.

RM: Do archaeologists draw things or is that a specialized branch of artist-archaeologists? I recall a few Egyptologists who started out that way?

GH: Most archaeologists hire professional artists for their artifact illustrations and reconstruction drawings, though they might make their own schematic drawings of things like ceramic vessel profiles. Scientific illustration just happens to be a way I can bring two of my interests (art and archaeology) together. In fact, for me, archaeology is a wonderful sort of compromise that allows me to bring together my loves of writing, art, travel, music, teaching, and studying the past. Usually, I do pen-and-ink artifact illustrations using a standardized stippling technique. Later, I digitize these for publication. I’ve also done paintings such as an oil painting reconstruction of the ceramic vessel assemblage recovered from the Early Formative period (2000–1000 BCE) site of La Consentida during my dissertation project.

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Painting of the Tlacuache ceramic complex by Guy Hepp.

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RM: Do you generally draw objects from excavations and is that part of your job?

GH: I usually do illustrations of objects that are iconographic, meaning they bear decorations that I think may be useful for interpreting something about ancient beliefs, identity, or social practices. These artifacts may come from museums or excavated contexts. While museum examples may be more complete, they frequently lack the contextual information of excavated examples, which can help us better understand the roles they played in the past. Formal illustrations are still useful in the era of digital imagery because they can help us depict subtle surface details of objects, even eroded ones, that otherwise might just look like a blob in a photograph. Publishers tend to like these illustrations because they’re eye-catching, can convey a lot of information, are cheap to print, and don’t require color. When pigment is part of the decoration of an object, of course, we need to find a way to indicate that in the illustration or use photography in that instance. I began doing artifact illustrations for pay as a high school student (my first archaeology job) and have since done pro-bono illustrations for friends and colleagues just because I love to do it and it gives me a chance to work with some truly amazing pieces, such as a stone rain deity mask I illustrated for my friend Jeff Brzezinski’s project. From a copyright perspective, artifact illustration also gives me the chance to show imagery from other research projects or artifacts whose whereabouts are unknown without worrying about image permission. I simply re-draw the object and cite the source like a bibliographic citation, since the artwork is mine.

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Above and below: All artifacts illustrated here are from the Early Formative period (2000–1000 BCE) village site of La Consentida, Oaxaca, Mexico. Based on radiocarbon dates from the site, most probably date to about 1850–1500 BCE, specifically. All dates are calibrated. Figure above: Figurine depicting possible ballplayer with protective belt and broken tripod support for standing and repositioning. Image courtesy Guy Hepp.

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Playable bird instrument (ocarina) from ritual cache. One of the oldest known ceramic musical instruments in Mesoamerica. Image courtesy Guy Hepp.

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Head of a crested bird instrument (whistle or ocarina) with smoothed interior surface from resonating chamber. From early platform fill layer near human burials. Image courtesy Guy Hepp.

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Part II

RM: Your essay, Landfalls, Sunbursts, and the Capacha Problem: A Case for Pacific Coastal Interaction in Early Formative–Period Mesoamerica, is wide-ranging and fascinating. So, there are objects in Mesoamerica that show influences from far away in S. America? Can you speak about this long network of exchange?

GH: When the Spanish arrived in the 16th century, they recorded long-distance expeditions of merchants using balsa rafts and traveling between distant coastal points in Ecuador and West Mexico. This exchange network is still not fully understood but has been replicated with experimental archaeology, studied with complex charts of offshore currents, and is likely responsible for the broad distribution of spondylus shell jewelry and some metallurgical techniques, including lost-wax casting, which seem to have been imported to Mesoamerica from South America. In the paper you’re referring to, I argued based on pottery decorations (particularly a motif sometimes called the “sunburst”) as well as basic ceramic forms and patterns of human dental modification, that this interaction network can be pushed much further back, to approximately 3,500–4,000 years ago.

This would explain why early ceramics in western Mesoamerica are dissimilar to those found closer to Central America, in a region called the Soconusco. It would also suggest that there were two ancient sources of Mesoamerican pottery traditions, one stemming from Central America and the other from northern South America by way of this Pacific coastal maritime route. This is a bold claim, but it actually revives work in the mid-20th century by scholars such as Isabel Kelly, who predicted by at least as early as the 1970s that we should expect to see evidence along the Pacific coast of “landfalls” by participants in such a network connecting South America and Mesoamerica. This project was fantastic to work on because it combined ceramic analyses from my dissertation work in Oaxaca with opportunities to visit some of the oldest pottery in the Americas (called Valdivia) in Ecuador and the Capacha phase ceramics of West Mexico. My paper was part of a larger research collaboration with scholars working mostly in later periods, and there’s much more to do. Linguistic evidence, for example, would be a strong way to support such an argument.

RM: Where did the shapes and objects first appear in S. America?

GH: This is a fascinating area of emerging research and one in which I’m not an expert. The Valdivia ceramics of the Pacific coast of northern South America are some of the oldest in the hemisphere but there are even older ceramics that are poorly understood from elsewhere in South America, including in the Amazon. If some of the earliest ceramics and complex communities existed in the Amazon rainforest, they are difficult to trace now, in part because of the highly acidic sediments of the forest and a lack of extensive study there.

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Valdivia bowls with labyrinth pattern, Museo Casa del Alabado, Quito, Ecuador. Marsupium, Creative Commons CC0 1.0 Universal Public Domain Dedication, Wikimedia Commons

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I’ve seen it suggested by a Brazilian scholar that the Amazon rainforest itself is not a primordial, natural phenomenon but rather the remnants of an anthropogenic garden landscape long curated by native peoples to emphasize cultivation and support village life. We have so much more to learn about ancient human influence in the Americas and the true early origins of the Anthropocene.

RM: Were historians and archaeologists of past generations aware of this long-distance bartering and exchange?

GH: Arguments for long-distance trade and interaction were very common in archaeology throughout most of the 20th century. These fell from favor after about the 1970s and were replaced by an emphasis on local developments of many technological innovations. Without discounting the ingenuity of local populations to develop their own traditions and goods, I am in a camp of scholars who think that this theoretical pendulum shift away from “diffusionist” arguments may have been an over-correction. The baby was tossed out with the bathwater, so to speak, and we now tend to underestimate the abilities of ancient people to travel, navigate, communicate, and exchange goods and ideas across long distances. Calling me a “neo-diffusionist” might be going too far, as I think we always must remember that local people will adapt ideas from elsewhere to their own needs. I do think that we must follow the evidence, though, even when it suggests that people of the past surmounted daunting obstacles.

RM: Can you tell us about your upcoming plans for research in Oaxaca?

GH: I’ve recently submitted a grant proposal to return to coastal Oaxaca to study La Consentida, the Early Formative period village site where I did my doctoral dissertation work. If approved, this new study would take place over at least three seasons and include excavations at La Consentida, more excavations and mapping at a neighboring site called Cabeza de Vaca, and the first of what will likely be several seasons of laboratory analysis of the artifacts and other materials we recover. La Consentida, and likely also Cabeza de Vaca (based on some artifacts found at the surface) were among the earliest settled villages in Mesoamerica. Radiocarbon dates for La Consentida, for example, indicate that the site was occupied between about 2000 and 1500 BCE, which was a time of fundamental changes in Mesoamerica including the establishment of settled villages, a shift toward the first complex social hierarchies, and an increasing reliance on domesticated foods such as maize. Whereas the goal of my dissertation project was to gather as much information as possible about the broad topics of social organization, settlement practices, and ancient diet, my goals for this new project will intentionally be much narrower. The team and I (it will be a collaborative endeavor) will focus on remnants of domestic contexts, particularly houses and their associated refuse. We hope to better understand the social units (or “households”) that occupied the homes of Early Formative period coastal Oaxacan communities to question decades-old assumptions about gender roles, the organization of the family, and in general the social units that populated these settlements. For decades, researchers have assumed that the house in early Mesoamerican villages was the domain of women and that public space was reserved for men. But ethnohistoric evidence from Oaxaca describing the public and political activities of women and collectives, as well as the ubiquity of artifacts gendered “feminine,” such as figurines, really throw this into question in my opinion. At the very least, these old assumptions, which may say more about 20th-century Western society than they do about the Early Formative period, should be crafted into testable research questions.

For my dissertation project, I was in coastal Oaxaca multiple times, the longest of which had me living in a small coastal town for 10 months. Since my wife and I recently had a baby, and because I have teaching responsibilities during the academic year, I am hoping that this new targeted approach will help us address some very specific (but fundamental) research questions and take place in shorter, concentrated visits to coastal Oaxaca so I can still be a good dad at home!

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Guy Hepp is an Associate Professor of Anthropology at California State University, San Bernardino. He holds a B.A. and a Ph.D. from the University of Colorado at Boulder and an M.A. from Florida State University. His research is focused on early complex societies of Mesoamerica and especially the archaeology of La Consentida, an Early Formative period (2000–1000 cal BC) village in Oaxaca, Mexico. This project, funded by the National Science Foundation and the Fulbright Program, was awarded the Society for American Archaeology’s 2016 Dissertation Award. In 2019, Hepp published a book based on his dissertation with the University Press of Colorado. He recently co-edited another book with the University Press of Florida and has authored publications about mortuary archaeology, paleoethnobotany, interregional interaction, radiocarbon dating, heritage politics, ceramic figurines, musical instruments, masks, and the archaeology of the senses.

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National Geographic Wayfinder Award Recipient – Aliaa Ismail and the New Era of Techno-Archaeology

You may recognize her from several documentaries such as Lost Treasures of Egypt, Unearthed and others. Egyptologist Aliaa Ismail of Factum Arte is a proud recipient of the National Geographic Wayfinder Award. She was previously awarded the Future 50 Leaders Award in 2022 by the Project Management Institute for using new technology to preserve ancient historical treasures. This award holds the promise of a continuing cooperation with her projects in the future as she is now an honorary NatGeo society member. 

Like Sarah Parcak’s revolutionary use of LIDAR satellite scans to locate thousands of settlements and 17 previously unknown pyramid sites throughout Egypt, Aliaa is part of an exciting, new wave of guardians with a clear vision, embracing the latest technology to transform the field of archaeology for the better. These guardians of ancient Egypt devote their entire lives to researching, discovering, preserving, and educating the masses on the importance of one of humanity’s most impactful cultures.

In a world embattled by climate change, fragile ancient sites in Egypt can be destroyed in an instant and lost forever. Aliaa’s ongoing projects of creating 3D replicas of these important ancient sites makes them accessible to all, amplifying their importance on a global scale. To create the replica of King Tutankhamun’s tomb and Seti I, Aliaa (pictured left) and her Egyptian team of conservators utilized a variety of high-tech tools to collect the massive data necessary to forge an exact replica. For example: portable chemical imaging technology and X-ray fluorescence in chemical imaging technology were implemented to help uncover changes made in Egyptian tomb paintings by the original artists thousands of years ago that may never be noticed through plain eyesight. Additionally, hyperspectral imaging analyzed the painting on multiple wavelengths, such as ultraviolet or infrared, revealing more secrets than are visible to the human eye.

Before Factum Arte’s Theban Necropolis Preservation Initiative (TNPI) was given permission to scan these tombs, the process of analyzing one tomb could take an average of 10 to 15 years. Now, the new digital tools and technological advances help shave years off the process.

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An Interview with Aliaa

EV (Eric Vasallo): What current projects are you working on and have you received the permit to begin documenting Nefertari’s tomb yet?

Aliaa: We have been waiting for years for permits in order to begin scanning and documenting Nefertari’s tomb as well as Ay’s (Tut’s successor) tomb. It is currently in pending status. I am hopeful to get good news next year and that this award will aid in this process of granting permission to continue our conservational work. 

EV: Nicholas Reeves formulated his theories for discoveries of potential doorways behind the painted plaster walls of Tutankhamen’s main burial chamber using Factum Arte’s scans of Tut’s tomb. What other discoveries have been made during your projects while photographing and documenting the minute details of tombs?

Aliaa – Belzoni made wax and plaster casts of Seti tomb in the 1800’s to make a facsimile to show in an expo in London. Those marks are still visible in their scans – those casts with the original traces of ancient paints. His replica has been lost to time and is most likely hidden in a London basement somewhere. 

My team and I are still processing the monumental amount of high-resolution data collected from Seti tomb and hope to create a partial replica to be permanently housed inside the new Grand Egyptian Museum (GEM).

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The team at work.

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The team together.

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EV: Does the Theban Necropolis Preservation Initiative (TNPI) anticipate any benefits toward your pursuits in utilizing Artificial Intelligence (AI) possibly to collect and interpret data faster than via human intervention? Where do you envision that technology being implemented in your field?

For Factum Arte’s VR tut experience their high-res data had to be downgraded to create the VR experience as these technologies work with low-res files.  So AI promises to connect their high-res data to incorporate into a more detailed and immersive VR experience. 

EV: What was the inciting event if any that led you to where you are today? What sparked your interest to become an Egyptologist?

Aliaa- I was born in Cairo, Egypt but my family soon moved to South Africa for work, and I essentially grew up in Lesotho not knowing anything about ancient Egypt. I was disconnected from the rich cultural past of my country. I enrolled in the American University at Cairo and originally planned to go for some architectural or engineering degree like my father and an elective came up which was a class on ancient Egypt taught by none other than Salima Ikram. She was amazing and after that class, it opened my eyes and I never looked back. I was 100 percent committed to passionately pursuing a career as an Egyptologist. 

EV: If you had a billionaire ready to invest in your work, what dream preservation project would you embark on? 

Aliaa – My dream would be to implement a program as a way to educate and empower local communities to learn of the importance of these neglected ancient sites, because these local people are ultimately the caretakers of the sites. This is why grassroots activism is so important to ignite interest and a love for these ancient sites to preserve them for generations to come instead of falling into obscurity and neglect. Looters, for example, always come from other cities. They are not locals. These local Egyptians that I train, will sustain the conservation after the grant money runs out. I always reinforce to them the importance of preserving an artifact and how the information held inside the artifacts is lost when it is sold on the black market.

EV: You were also given this award for your Green Desert Project, where you and your spouse have restored arid desert to its original green, fertile state. Where are you with this project?

Aliaa- The Green Desert project was started by my husband Abdo Ghaba’s father, Mohammed Hassan Ghaba on the West Bank of Luxor with a crop of wheat, hibiscus, peanuts, onions, date, and sycamore trees. He had a vision to restore fertility to the desert. Egypt in the 50’s encouraged people to settle on agricultural land and because of that shift, desertification has been encroaching across the country. In what used to be one the of the world’s most abundant bread baskets, today Egypt cannot feed itself without importing grain. The project is fully green. We use solar panels and deep well water which was very expensive to accomplish. We have successfully experimented with Guava trees, clover, and wheat crops. The Green Desert Project is self-funded, and plans are to start a crowd funding campaign to fund further work towards the project’s goal of planting 10,000 trees. The hope is to start a national, government sponsored project of increasing agricultural production nationwide. In the meantime, I am focused on nursing my newborn baby boy, Suleiman, named after a prophet. 

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The Future

Technology is fast transforming the field of archaeology. Just this month, the first discovery using Artificial Intelligence was made in Peru’s Nazca lines. AI was able to recognize hidden geoglyphs previously invisible to the naked human eye.

Deep learning can simulate the behavior of the brain, learning large amounts of data. It is a driver of AI capable of performing analytical and physical tasks without human intervention and currently lies behind everyday products like digital assistants (Siri, Alexa) or self-driving cars. Deep learning can aid archaeologists in deciphering lost languages that have eluded scholars for decades. It can also quickly piece together artifacts in museum storage across the world and create a 3D virtual model for researchers to study. For example: there are thousands of cuneiform tablets yet undeciphered or translated in museum storage spaces. If you teach the Deep Learning AI how to translate the language held in the tablets it can quickly scan and translate the thousands of fragments, piecing them together in a fraction of the time it would take a human. The technology is not as “smart” thus far and would require human moderators to check the data it produces, but it still holds the potential to save money and time for scholars in the field.

One problem created by these new technologies spurring discoveries of ancient sites is that it is outpacing the authorities’ ability to care for them. The flipside is these new technologies can help lower the costs of excavation and make them less destructive with more powerful scanning tools.

Some academics estimate that over 60% of Egypt’s sites and artifacts are still hidden underground. If true, Aliaa and the other guardians in this new wave of techno-archaeologists will assure that the antiquities are excavated, protected and carefully preserved for future generations of humans to learn and understand the complexity of the civilizations that have given us meaning and changed our evolutionary path.

It is poetic justice for Aliaa’s mission, who once was a young, disconnected Egyptian herself, unaware of the importance of the ancient Egyptian civilization to humanity, to now actively re-engage and train a small army of local Egyptians, educating them about their priceless cultural heritage. 

“If you are thinking 1 year ahead, plant seeds
If you are thinking 10 years ahead, plant a tree
If you are thinking 100 years ahead, educate the people.”

 —- Chinese Emperor Kuan Tsu, 5th century BCE

Like a seed dropped into black fertile Nile soil, Aliaa Ismail is planting seeds for the future by educating and empowering her fellow Egyptians. Like the Ancient Egyptians in their quest for immortality, she has found a way of continuing her guardianship of Egypt’s rich cultural heritage for generations to come.

Join us in congratulating this pioneer transforming her field to a high-tech future. We certainly can’t wait to see what she accomplishes next.

Emerging technology such as LIDAR satellite scanning, Artificial Intelligence, and Deep Learning are already transforming the field but don’t expect archaeologists to hang up their trowels or brushes any time soon. They will be adding these tools to their arsenal, taking the field well into the future.

What will archaeology look like in 2030 or beyond?

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Sources

Wayfinder Award recipients:  https://blog.nationalgeographic.org/2023/05/31/the-national-geographic-society-announces-the-2023-wayfinder-award-recipients/

Space archaeologist using lasers from space to discover lost ancient sites:
https://bigthink.com/the-present/ted-prize-winner-sarah-parcak-uses-satellites-and-the-wisdom-of-crowds-to-revolutionize-archeological-exploration-and-preservation/

Discovery made utilizing AI:

https://news.artnet.com/art-world/nazca-geoglyphs-peru-ai-2316856

Belzoni’s facsimilie of Seti I’s tomb in 1821 at the Piccadilly Exhibition in London:  https://www.researchgate.net/publication/30957073_Giovanni_Battista_Belzoni’s_exhibition_of_the_reconstructed_tomb_of_Pharaoh_Seti_I_in_1821

The Archaeology Podcast – discussion on how AI is transforming the field of Archaeology: 
https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-archaeology-show/id1168248976?i=1000622805422

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Petrarch…The Original Latin Lover

Professor Frank J. Korn has retired from his teaching position on the Classical Studies faculty at Seton Hall University.  He is a Fulbright Scholar at the American Academy in Rome and the author of nine books on various aspects of the Eternal City.  He is listed in Marquis Who’s Who as “a notable classical educator and writer.”  Recipient of the Princeton Prize for Distinguished Teaching, he resides with his wife Camille in Scotch Plains, N.J.  The couple’s three sons –  Frank, Ronald, and John and their families live nearby.  His latest book    Below Rome, the Story of the Catacombs    which he co-authored with his wife, is available on Amazon or from the publisher, St. Johann Press, Haworth, N.J.

His storied life was dominated by two enduring loves: one of the heart, the other of the mind. The stunningly beautiful Laura was the object of the first; the romantic mystery of long ago Rome, the second. Both held him in thrall throughout his earthly days.

Born to a Florentine exile and his wife at Arezzo in Tuscany on July 20, 1304, Francesco Petrarch spent much of his boyhood in Avignon in Provence, in the south of France. In the schools there he was introduced to the Latin language, a subject to which he would remain passionately attached until his last breath. (Literally! As we shall see in due course.)

When his dear mother died in 1318, the precocious teenager mourned and honored her with exquisitely composed Latin verses of his own. By this time he was spending most of his time and all of his allowance tracking down the scarce copies of works by ancient authors. His father, an attorney, disdained his son’s feverish interest in such things as a waste of time and packed him off to the nearby University of Montpelier for law studies.

Some months into Francesco’s first term, the elder Petrarch, aiming to check up on his reluctant law student, paid a surprise visit to Francesco’s tiny, cluttered room. When the cranky parent spotted a volume of Vergil’s Aeneid and one of Cicero’s Rhetoric on a shelf, he angrily tossed both into the blazing fireplace. With the heartbroken young man reduced to sobs, the father was moved to rescue the two badly charred treasures from the flames.

By the year 1326, out from under his father’s thumb, Francesco had put aside all thoughts of a legal career and had turned his focus on becoming a published poet.

On Good Friday, April 6 of the following year, while attending services at the Church of Sainte Claire in Avignon he breathlessly beheld for the first time the lovely Laura who would become his version of Dante’s Beatrice who, sadly for the Divine Comedy composer, was already married. Dante had to resign himself to the cruel fact that his ardent love for one he considered the ideal of womanhood    beautiful, intelligent, dignified, modest, gentle, charismatic, with an air of mystery    would have to remain forever Platonic. He had to console himself with a collection of panegyrical poems to her, under the title La Vita Nuova.

The opening verses tell us much about the depth of Dante’s feelings:

Tanto gentile e tanto onesta pare la donna mia quand’ella

altrui saluta ch’ ogni lingua deven tremando muta e li

occhi no l’ardiscon di guadare…e par che sia una cosa

venuta da cielo in terra a miracol mostrare.

….

(She seems so honest and kind my lady when she greets

others that every tongue becomes tremblingly mute

and eyes dare not even glance at her,,,and it seems she

may be something come from Heaven down to earth

miraculously.)

Like Beatrice, Petrarch’s heartthrob was also wed by now, leaving him with nothing but a burning, unrequited love. Unlike Beatrice, however, who stood aloof and denied Dante even a passing glance, Laura — while remaining ever faithful to her marriage vows    managed, even if perhaps unwittingly, to keep alive the love and ambition of the young Petrarch by her grace and warmth and smiles.

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Laura and Petrarch. Sandra Cohen-Rose and Colin Rose, Creative Commons Attribution 2.0 Generic, Wikimedia Commons

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The young man softened his bitter disappointment by resolving to love her from afar, and immortalize her through his pen, making Laura the central figure of his Canzoniere, a vast harvest of 366 ardent love sonnets, written in Italian.

In one poem he tells of his first sighting of the woman of his dreams:

Ov’ Amore co’ begli occhi

cor m’ aperse

…e la’ v’ ella mi scorse

nel benedetto giorno

….

(Where Love opened my heart

with those lovely eyes

…and there where she noticed me

upon that holy day.)

In another, he depicts the object of his affection in an enchanting bucolic setting, seated on a sun-washed Spring day beneath a tree beside a murmuring brook:

Da bei rami scendea

(Dolce nella memoria)

Una pioggia di fior sovra il suo grembo.

Qual fior cadea sul lembo

Qual su le trecce bionde.

….

(From the beautiful branches there dropped

…How sweet the memory –

A shower of blossoms on her.

Some fell on her apron,

Others upon her blond tresses.)

…………………………

Meanwhile, his love of ancient literature was also growing ever more intense, taking him on long journeys in search of his idols    Vergil, Ovid, Horace, Livy, et al. The works of the fabled Roman authors, you see, had slipped into neglect and abandonment with the fall of Rome. The barbarian invaders had rampaged through the old empire, destroying everything in their path, among which were libraries and other centers of scholarship. The precious and priceless writings of the Classical Age virtually perished in this madness. The study of and interest in Roman literature had withered away, but Petrarch [portrait drawing, left] dedicated himself to doing something about it. For this, all Latin professors and their students, ever since, owe an enormous intellectual debt to him.

Never truly at ease in the world into which he was born, Petrarch sought to live among his friends of Classical Rome. In Latin literature he found ideals of truth and beauty, which he exhorted the whole Western World to reclaim. The wonders of antiquity clutched at his very soul. The past, he insisted, was the road to understanding the present and preparing for the future. He felt that the decline of humanity in Medieval times could be ascribed to mankind’s severance of ties to its own glorious past. Thus he thought it called for a renewal of knowledge that tied the present to antiquity. Consequently, he encouraged and fostered a return to primary sources by way of the study of the works of those long ago authors.

A tireless wandering classicist, he traveled throughout Italy and other parts of Europe in his quest for old manuscripts, however tattered they might be. He followed up rumors, chased down leads, made endless inquiries, bought shabby, worn codices at any price. Francesco even had friends and mere acquaintances on the lookout as well, urging them to forage among the bookshelves of monasteries, seminaries, academies, and other centers of learning. Driven by his unquenchable thirst for knowledge, he would read, annotate, and refurbish every treasured acquisition and then make multiple copies.

At Liege in Belgium he thrilled to his discovery of a dusty, cobwebbed copy of Cicero’s defense of Archias. During a sojourn in his native Arezzo, he stumbled upon a badly battered but still legible text of Quintilian. In Mantua he found Pliny’s Natural History. But it was in Verona, birthplace of Catullus, that Petrarch made the supreme discovery of his life. While scouting every nook and cranny of the cathedral library there, he unearthed from a huge pile of crumbled and crumpled old tomes a collection of Cicero’s Letters to Atticus, as well as monastic reproductions of the statesman’s correspondence with Quintus, his kid brother, and with Brutus. Petrarch’s tenacity was paying off. He was ecstatic!

These letters afforded glimpses of the social life of Rome in the first century before Christ. They also shed much light on the pulsating political landscape of the dying Roman Republic, and on Cicero’s complex personality.

The quintessential scholar pored over every line in an all-out effort to know Cicero like a living, breathing friend. The similarities between the two writers    separated by thirteen centuries  – were numerous and noteworthy. Both were sensitive, cultured, idealistic, humane men of letters. Both were practitioners of an elegant florid style. Both sang the praises of the old Republic. In fact, Petrarch hoped to live to see the day of its resurrection.

Coming to the conclusion that genuine correspondence on everyday matters constituted a literary genre of its own (i.e. letters addressed to private individuals but meant for a public readership), he suddenly developed an itch for letter writing. He honed his skills by penning long rambling open messages, in Latin, to his contemporaries and to his fellow literati from old Roman times such as Horace, Ovid, Vergil, and Livy. And of course, Cicero.

Here are the opening lines of his first of two letters to him:

Franciscus Ciceroni suo salutem.

Epistolas tuas diu multumque

perquisitas atque ubi minime

rebar inventas, avidissime perlegi

….

(Greetings from Francesco to Cicero,

I have read most eagerly

your letters which I had sought

for such a long time and found

them where I least expected to.)

Petrarch continues, sometimes lauding Cicero for his decency, his intellect, his eloquence etc., but more often calling him out for his shortcomings:

“Now perhaps it’s time to listen to someone else’s advice and constructive criticism, to a fellow writer, that is, who greatly

admires you and treasures your very name.”

Petrarch goes on to mention, in passing, many of Cicero’s important and influential friends such as Pompey, Brutus and Octavian    and bitter foes such as Julius Caesar and Marc Antony.  He chastises Cicero for his tendency toward inconsistency and even pettiness:

In one breath you speak glowingly of such people as your   

         brother and his son, of Dionysiuis Pomponius (Cicero’s

         boyhood tutor), of Dolabella (a politician and general who

         happened also to be his son-in-law) and in another breath

        you turn on them in your wrath. But perhaps such mood

        swings I should overlook.” 

Yet Petrarch continues to pile on, chiding Cicero for letting petty politics rankle him and cost him his normally proper and dignified bearing; for ignoring the wise counsel of his dear brother Quintus; for often failing to practice the stoicism he preached; for letting himself be swept into the vortex of Rome’s political turmoil instead of holding himself above the fray.

The fourteenth century A.D. correspondent closes his letter to the first century B.C. recipient with this lament:

You would have been better off now in your old age if you

        had never held high office, never boasted of your triumph

        over Catiline the conspirator, never yearned for power and

        fame, if you had lived out your senior years indulging the

        peaceful life of the mind that you so cherished: reading,

        philosophizing, meditating on the eternal life, not on this

        evanescent existence, and savoring the tranquility of your

        cozy country villas.  Farewell my Cicero.”

The scholar/poet signed off citing his whereabouts whence he penned this letter:

From Verona, a city on the banks of the Adige in

         Transpadane, Italy, June 16 in the year of the Lord you

         never knew, 1345.”

Six months later, Petrarch sends Cicero another letter, much less critical and far more adulatory:

“I’m afraid you found my previous letter offensive. What I

found fault with was the way you lived your life, not your

intellectual achievements, especially your mastery of

language. …You are the father of eloquence and so

many of us cherish and thank you for the elegance of your

Latin. Whatever talent I have as a writer of prose, I owe

to you. As for any success I enjoy in poetry, however, I

must say I am indebted to Publius Vergilius Maro (Vergil).

In your old age, you read works by him in his youth and

lavished great praise on them, and predicted a great

future for him…”

Petrarch continues in this vein for the rest of this rather lengthy epistle, and concludes with this “postmark.”

From the land of the living, on the banks of the Rhone

In southern Gaul, (i.e. Avignon), December 19, 1345.”

So admiring of the words and deeds of the Classical authors was Petrarch that he sometimes found himself wishing that he had lived in their era so that he could have had the opportunity to meet them and know them in actuality rather than merely in his imagination.

He opens his letter to the historian Titus Livius (Livy) with these sentiments:

I only wish, with Heaven permitting, either that I had lived

          In your times, or you in mine, for I would have been all the

         better for it. As it is though, I must content myself with

         knowing you solely from your published works.

Re:  the condition of the books he found, he writes to the rhetorician Quintilian—–

I just recently became acquainted with your literary talent,

        having stumbled upon a mangled, shabby copy of your book,

        On Oratory.

        …..Right at this very moment there might very well be  – 

somewhere on someone’s shelves, an edition of it in

        good condition    without the owner having the slightest

        idea of what an eminent guest is in his library.

In a glowing message to the Roman historian Asinius Pollio, Petrarch gushes:

Some years back I came up with the idea of sending social

        letters to certain gifted authors of long ago, including you.

                  I congratulate you for your distinguished consulship, for your

brilliant mind and writings, and for a host of other

accomplishments; and for your wise decision to spend

the concluding years of your illustrious life in the pleasant

ambience of your idyllic villa up in Tusculum.  (Note:

Tusculum was a town in the Alban Hills, south of Rome.)

The ever scholarly Petrarch tried hard to learn Greek so that he might read, in the original, the Hellenic masters from across the Adriatic, particularly Homer; but he had scant success with the language. We learn this from his Latin letter to the author of the Iliad:

I have long wanted to write to you if only I knew your native

tongue. I was not fortunate enough, however, to master it. 

Petrarch’s correspondence, with both his living and deceased friends, forge a record of life in the gloomy past of the Middle Ages in Europe and at the same time somewhat of an intimate diary of the Tuscan poet himself.

All his epistolary activities notwithstanding, Petrarch continued to find time and energy to produce some of the finest poetry ever written    much of it in Latin, the rest in Italian. His epic Africa, in Latin hexameters, extolled Rome’s victorious struggle against Hannibal of Carthage, while singling out, for the lion’s share of praise, the general Scipio, to whom the Roman Senate awarded the honorific: “Africanus” for his smashing conquest in the Third    and last    Punic War.

Another epic by Petrarch, Trionfi (Triumphs) composed in Italian, tells of a dream he had in which Humanity begins to move, ever so slowly but inexorably, toward a renewed belief and reverence for God.

Like Dante’s Divina Commedia, it was composed in the exceedingly difficult terza rima, a verse form consisting of tercets (i.e. three-line stanzas in which the second line rhymes with the first and third of the next stanza).

Petrarch’s abiding admiration of the glory that was Rome would induce him to return to the Eternal City from time to time. There he would lose himself in reverie amid the majestic rubble of the Forum Romanum. On one of his visits    April 1341    in solemn ceremonies on the Capitoline Hill, he was crowned by the Senate with a laurel wreath and proclaimed the pre-eminent poet of his era.

He and his circle of fellow intellectuals, including Bocaccio, had by their enthusiasm for the art, architecture, and literature of Classical Rome, inaugurated a movement which came to be known as Humanism, and which was to refashion European culture. It also laid the groundwork for the great creative epoch that followed. We know it as the Renaissance.

Francesco Petrarch is a most splendid example of how an inquiring, thirsty mind can be stimulated and energized for life by exposure to Classical Studies. He would be the perfect “poster boy” for the perennial campaign to restore Latin to its once prominent place in the curriculum of elementary, secondary, and higher education.

This extraordinary Man-For-All-Seasons died at his desk at his country house in Arqua, in the Euganean Hills near Padua, on July 19, 1374, one day shy of his seventieth birthday. He was found slumped over an open volume of … Cicero.

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The author and his wife in the main piazza of Arpino, Cicero’s boyhood hometown.  (Photo by Teresa Mastrobuoni.)

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How an ancient society in the Sahara Desert rose and fell with groundwater

GEOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF AMERICA—Pittsburgh, Pa., USA: With its low quantities of rain and soaring high temperatures, the Sahara Desert is often regarded as one of the most extreme and least habitable environments on Earth. While the Sahara was periodically much greener in the distant past, an ancient society living in a climate very similar to today’s found a way to harvest water in the seemingly dry Sahara—thriving until the water ran out.

New research* that will be presented Monday, 16 Oct., at the Geological Society of America’s GSA Connects 2023 meeting describes how a series of serendipitous environmental factors allowed an ancient Saharan civilization, the Garamantian Empire, to extract groundwater hidden in the subsurface, sustaining the society for nearly a millennia until the water was depleted.

“Societies rise and fall at the pleasure of the physical system, such that there are special features that let humanity grow up there,” says Frank Schwartz, professor in the School of Earth Sciences at The Ohio State University and lead author of the research study.

Monsoon rains had transformed the Sahara into a comparatively lush environment between 11,000 and 5,000 years ago, providing surface water resources and habitable environments for civilizations to thrive. When the monsoon rains stopped 5,000 years ago, the Sahara turned back into a desert, and civilizations retreated from the area—aside from an unusual outlier.

The Garamantes lived in the southwestern Libyan desert from 400 BCE to 400 CE under nearly the same hyper-arid conditions that exist there today and were the first urbanized society to become established in a desert that lacked a continuously flowing river. The surface water lakes and rivers of the “Green Sahara” times were long gone by the time the Garamantes arrived, but there was luckily water stored underground in a large sandstone aquifer—potentially one of the largest aquifers in the world, according to Schwartz.

Camel trade routes from Persia through the Sahara brought the Garamantes technology on how to harvest groundwater using foggara or qanats. This method involved digging a slightly inclined tunnel into a hillside, to just below the water table. Groundwater would then flow down the tunnel and into irrigation systems. The Garamantes dug a total of 750 km of underground tunnels and vertical access shafts to harvest groundwater, with the greatest construction activity occurring between 100 BCE and 100 CE.

Schwartz integrates prior archaeological research with hydrologic analyses to understand how the local topography, geology, and unique runoff and recharge conditions produced the ideal hydrogeologic conditions for the Garamantes to be able to extract groundwater.

“Their qanats shouldn’t have actually worked, because the ones in Persia have annual water recharge from snowmelt, and there was zero recharge here,” says Schwartz.

The Garamantes had a significant streak of environmental luck, with the earlier wetter climate, appropriate topography, and unique groundwater settings, which made groundwater available with foggara technology. However, their luck ran out when groundwater levels fell below the foggara tunnels.

According to Schwartz, two trends are particularly concerning. First, extreme environments are becoming more prevalent around the world in countries like Iran. Second, it has become more common to use groundwater unsustainably.

“As you look at modern examples like the San Joaquin Valley, people are using the groundwater up at a faster rate than it’s being replenished,” says Schwartz. “California had a great wet winter this year, but that followed 20 years of drought. If the propensity for drier years continues, California will ultimately run into the same problem as the Garamantians. It can be expensive and ultimately impractical to replace depleted groundwater supplies.”

With no new water to replenish the aquifer and no surface water available, lack of water led to the downfall of the Garamantian Empire. The Garamantes serve as a cautionary tale for the power of groundwater as a resource, and the danger of its overuse.

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Map location and satellite aerial imagery showing the region and landscape where ancient societies and Garamantes lived. Image from NASA/Luca Pietranera.

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Cross-section showing how a foggara or qanat works. An upward sloping tunnel is built into a hillside with vertical shafts until groundwater is reached. The groundwater then flows down the tunnel. Figure courtesy of Frank Schwartz.

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Article Source: GEOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF AMERICA news release.

*Living in Extreme Environments: Hydrologic Serendipity and the Garamantian Empire of the Sahara Desert 87: T142. Achieving Groundwater Security across Local-to-Regional Scales in the Anthropocene .16 Oct. 2023, 8:05–8:25 a.m.

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About 2 million years ago, Homo erectus lived at high altitudes and produced both Oldowan and Acheulean tools

AMERICAN ASSOCIATION FOR THE ADVANCEMENT OF SCIENCE (AAAS)—Two million years ago, Homo erectus had expanded beyond the lowland savanna environments of East Africa and into the high-altitude regions of the Ethiopian highlands, where they produced both Oldowan and Acheulean tools, according to a new study. It presents a reanalysis of an early hominin fossil first discovered in 1981. The findings provide novel insights into the evolution, migration and adaptive capacities of early human ancestors. In Africa, the limited number of hominin fossils found in direct association with stone tools has hindered attempts to link Homo habilis and Homo erectus with particular stone tool industries, namely Oldowan or Acheulean. One region critical to studying this question is a collection of sites known as the Melka Kunture complex – a cluster of prehistoric sites on the highlands of Ethiopia at an altitude of ~2000 meters above sea level. In 1981, a fossilized infant mandible was discovered at the Garba IV site and in direct association with Oldowan lithic tools. However, the hominin species the fossil represents has been the subject of debate. In this study, Margherita Mussi and colleagues evaluate the geochronological context of the Garba IV site and re-assess the taxonomic affinity of the fossil mandible. Using synchrotron imaging to examine the internal morphology of the unerupted teeth in the Garba IV mandible, Mussi et al. confirm that it belonged to H. erectus. Moreover, combining preliminary argon-argon dates for the site’s stratigraphy with a more recently published magnetostratigraphic analysis, the authors argue that the fossil is around 2 million years old, making it one of the earliest H. erectus specimens yet discovered and the only one in clear association with an abundant Oldowan lithic industry. The overlying Acheulean tool-bearing strata, which date to ~1.95 million years ago, represent the earliest known evidence of Acheulean lithic technology. According to Mussi et al., the findings demonstrate that by 2 million years ago, H. erectus adapted early and quickly to a high-altitude mountain environment, first producing Oldowan technology and then Acheulean technology.

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Garba IV level E mandible of a Homo erectus child. Italo-Spanish Archaeological Mission at Melka Kunture, with ARCCH permit

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Garba IV level E_child and fossil remains. Diego Rodriguez Robredo

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Handaxe 4516 from Garba IV level D, the earliest Acheulean so far discovered, dated 1,950,000 years ago. Italo-Spanish Archaeological Mission at Melka Kunture, by ARCCH permit

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Article Source: AMERICAN ASSOCIATION FOR THE ADVANCEMENT OF SCIENCE (AAAS) news release.

Ancient Maya reservoirs and water management

PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES—The Classic Maya constructed wetlands that can offer lessons for modern water management, according to a study. Classic Maya cities in the tropical southern lowlands of Central America relied on reservoirs during annual dry seasons and periods of climatic instability for more than 1,000 years until around 900 CE. However, stored water can stagnate and become breeding grounds for mosquitoes. Lisa J. Lucero combined evidence from archaeological excavations, sediment cores, and iconographic and hieroglyphic records to reveal that Maya reservoirs functioned similarly to present-day constructed wetlands*. In constructed wetlands, aquatic plants remove excess nutrients from the water and support diverse zooplankton, resulting in a self-cleaning water supply. Archaeological excavations unearthed gravity-fed reservoirs that were constructed at least as early as 400 BCE and developed into sophisticated water management systems by 700 CE, with dams, channels, switching stations, and filtration systems. Aquatic plants used in constructed wetlands are now common in the region. Pollen from water lilies (Nymphaea ampla) that only grow in clean water has been found in sediment cores from several Maya reservoirs. Water lilies are also featured prominently in Maya iconography and were associated with kingship. According to the author, uncovering how Classic Maya reservoirs supplied clean water could inform the improvement of contemporary constructed wetlands.

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Lidar map of Tikal, Guatemala, showing some of its reservoirs. Francisco Estrada-Belli, PAQUNAM LiDAR Initiative

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More than 10,000 pre-Columbian earthworks remain hidden throughout Amazonian forests

Science—More than 10,000 Pre-Columbian archaeological sites likely rest undiscovered throughout the Amazon basin, estimates a new study. The findings, derived from remote sensing data and predictive spatial modeling, address questions about the influence of pre-Columbian societies on the Amazon region. “The massive extent of archaeological sites and widespread human-modified forests across Amazonia is critically important for establishing an accurate understanding of interactions between human societies, Amazonian forests, and Earth’s climate,” write the authors. Indigenous societies have called the Amazon basin home for more than 12,000 years, creating ancient earthwork structures and domesticated landscapes that have had long-lasting effects on modern forest composition. However, the size and scale of Amazon settlement and landscape transformation are poorly understood – sites are remote and often obscured by dense vegetation. As such, there has never been a comprehensive survey of pre-Columbian sites across the Amazon basin. Airborne LIDAR (light detection and ranging), a remote sensing technique that can map small changes in topography on the ground surface beneath the forest canopy, has been used to discover many previously unknown pre-Columbian structures and earthworks in heavily forested sites throughout Central and South America. Here, Vinicius Peripato and colleagues searched 5,315 square kilometers of LIDAR survey data and discovered 24 unreported human-made earthworks, including fortified villages, defensive and ceremonial structures, mountaintop settlements, and other geoglyphs, in regions across the Amazon basin. However, the LIDAR survey data covered only 0.08% of the total area of Amazonia. To better understand where and how many undocumented pre-Columbian sites might occur, Peripato et al. combined the data from their small basin-wide survey, as well as data on other previously identified sites with a predictive spatial distribution model. According to the model, between 10,272 and 23,648 large-scale pre-Columbian structures remain to be discovered, particularly in southwestern Amazonia. What’s more, the authors identified relationships between the predicted probability of earthworks and the occurrence and abundance of domesticated tree species and found significant association between the two, suggesting that active pre-Columbian Indigenous forest management practices have long shaped the ecology of modern forests across Amazonia. “Amazonian forests clearly merit protection not only for their ecological and environmental value but also for their high archaeological, social, and biocultural value, which can teach modern society how to sustainably manage its natural resources,” write Peripato et al.

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Earthwork on Amazonian landscape. Mauricio de Paiva

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LiDAR point cloud and the digital terrain beneath the forest with a vertical exaggeration of 2.5 meters. The scale on the right represents the tree’s height. Vinicius Peripato

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igure of the forested landscape of Amazonia. Hans ter Steege

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Article Source: Science news release.

*“Over 10,000 Pre-Columbian earthworks are still hidden throughout Amazonia” by Vinicius Peripato, Carolina Levis, et. al. www.science.org/doi/10.1126/science.ade2541.

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New, independent ages confirm antiquity of ancient human footprints at White Sands

AMERICAN ASSOCIATION FOR THE ADVANCEMENT OF SCIENCE (AAAS)—New radiocarbon (14C) and optically simulated luminescence ages have confirmed the controversial antiquity of the ancient human footprints discovered in White Sands National Park, and reported in a study* in 2021. Addressing the widespread criticism of their previous study, researchers report that the independent ages from multiple resolved sources conclusively show that the footprints were left behind between roughly 23,000 and 20,000 years ago, demonstrating that humans were present in southern North America during the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM).

When and how humans first migrated into North America has long been debated and remains poorly understood. Current estimates for the timing of these first occupants range from ~13,000 years ago to more than 20,000 years ago. However, the earliest archaeological evidence for the region’s settlement is sparse and often controversial. In a Science study published in September 2021 (Bennett et al.), researchers reported the discovery of in situ human footprints preserved in an ancient lakebed dating to between ~23,000 and 21,000 years ago in what is now White Sands National Park – findings which suggest nearly 2,000 years of human occupation in North America during the height of the LGM. However, since the study’s publication, the accuracy of the radiocarbon dates has been debated. It’s argued that the ancient seeds from the aquatic plant (Ruppia cirrhosa) that were used to date the surfaces the footprints were embedded in have the potential to be affected by old carbon reservoir effects that could influence the reported radiocarbon ages and make them appear older than they truly are.

Here, Jeffery Pigati, Kathleen Springer, and colleagues report new evidence in the form of multiple independent age estimates of the White Sands footprints, which support their previous study’s claims. “We always knew that we would have to independently evaluate the accuracy of our ages to convince the archaeological community that the peopling of the Americas occurred far earlier than traditionally thought,” said Pigati.

In their new work, Pigati and Springer et al. present calibrated 14C ages of terrestrial pollen collected from the same stratigraphic contexts as the Ruppia seeds. Unlike the seeds, conifer pollen fixes atmospheric carbon and, therefore is not subject to potential old carbon reservoir effects. According to the findings, the resulting calibrated 14C ages range from 23.4 ± 2.5 – 22.6 ± 2.3 thousand years ago. In addition, the authors obtained optically simulated luminescence ages of the sediments from within the footprint-bearing strata, which produced a minimum age of 21.5 ± 1.9 thousand years ago. In both cases, Pigati and Springer et al. show that the resolved dates were statistically indistinguishable from the original calibrated 14C ages of the oldest Ruppia seeds reported previously. In a related Perspective, Bente Phillipson discusses the study and its findings in greater detail.  

“Even as the original work was being published, we were forging ahead to test our results with multiple lines of evidence and independent chronologic techniques,” said Kathleen Springer, co-lead author of the study. “Although we were confident in the original seed ages, we wanted to develop community confidence in them as well. Our new ages, combined with the strong geologic, hydrologic, and stratigraphic evidence, unequivocally support the conclusion that humans were present in North America during the last Glacial Maximum.”

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Above and below: Human footprints at study site. National Park Service

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A single human footprint at site. National Park Service

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The study site trench with White Sands National Park Resource Program Manager, David Bustos in foreground. National Park Service

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Prehistoric people occupied upland regions of inland Spain in even the coldest periods of the last Ice Age

PLOS—Paleolithic human populations survived even in the coldest and driest upland parts of Spain, according to a study* published October 4, 2023 in the open-access journal PLOS ONE by Manuel Alcaraz-Castaño of the University of Alcalá, Spain, Javier Aragoncillo-del Rió of the Molina-Alto Tajo UNESCO Global Geopark, Spain and colleagues.

Research into ancient hunter-gatherer populations of the Iberian Peninsula has mainly focused on coastal regions, with relatively little investigation into the inland. A classic hypothesis has been that the cold and dry conditions of inland Iberia would have been too harsh for such populations to inhabit during the coldest periods of the Last Glacial, but recent findings have begun to challenge this view. In this study, researchers report new evidence for high-altitude human occupation from the Upper Paleolithic of Spain.

This evidence comes from a site called Charco Verde II, located in the Guadalajara province. This site is situated over 1,000 meters above sea level, in one of the coldest regions of Spain. Despite this, the abundance of tools and ornaments at the site reveals a recurring sequence of human occupation between around 21,000 and 15,000 years ago. This time span is especially notable since it includes two of the coldest periods of the Last Glacial.

This discovery further challenges the idea that Upper Palaeolithic humans avoided inland Iberia due to its harsh climate, and instead shows that the inland hosted complex and relatively dense settlements even during very cold and arid periods. These findings add to the growing evidence for Middle and Upper Paleolithic occupations throughout this region, altogether indicating that the historic lack of evidence for hunter-gatherer sites in inland Iberia is not an accurate reflection of prehistoric human distributions, but instead a result of modern research hitherto prioritizing study of coastal regions and neglecting the inland.

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View from the top of the Charco Verde II archeological deposit during the 2021 excavation season. Aragoncillo-del Río et al., 2023, PLOS ONE, CC-BY 4.0 (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)

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Selection of lithic artifacts collected at the Charco Verde II site. All come from Level 1 except number 3, which was found on the ground Surface of the archeological deposit, and number 6, recorded at the fluvial terrace below the slope. 1 & 4: Endscrapers on blades. 2, 3 & 6: Canted dihedral burins. 5 & 7: Large blades. 8: Unidirectional blade core. 9: Backed bladelet. 10: Denticulated backed bladelet. 11: Unidirectional bladelet core. Aragoncillo-del Río et al., 2023, PLOS ONE, CC-BY 4.0 (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)

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Article Source: PLoS ONE news release.

*Aragoncillo-del Río J, Alcolea-González J-J, Luque L, Castillo-Jiménez S, Jiménez-Gisbert G, López-Sáez J-A, et al. (2023) Human occupations of upland and cold environments in inland Spain during the Last Glacial Maximum and Heinrich Stadial 1: The new Magdalenian sequence of Charco Verde II. PLoS ONE 18(10): e0291516. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0291516

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Sediments imply that southern Jordan was once a wetland suitable for human migrations out of Africa

AMERICAN ASSOCIATION FOR THE ADVANCEMENT OF SCIENCE (AAAS)—New sediment analyses from southern Jordan offer new insights into the environmental conditions and chronology of human migration out of Africa during the last interglacial period. Mahmoud Abbas and colleagues’ findings support growing evidence that the region, now a desert, was once a wetland suitable for human passage. Additionally, stone flakes that the researchers dated to around 84,000 years ago suggest that migrants were taking this northern route earlier than previously believed. “Our findings support the growing consensus for a well-watered Jordan Rift Valley that funneled migrants into western Asia and northern Arabia,” the authors write. Homo sapiens are thought to have migrated out of Africa in multiple waves, including during the last major interglacial period, sometime between around 129,000 and 71,000 years ago. Fossil evidence shows that humans were present in Arabia during this period, but researchers have been unable to piece together the routes and chronologies of their dispersals. One theory is that humans traveled through Arabia into Asia via a southern route, crossing the Bab-el-Mandeb strait and dispersing along the southern coast. Another is that they took a northern passage through the Sinai Peninsula and Jordan Rift Valley. Recent analyses of sediments from central and southern Jordan suggest that this region may have been a wetland during the last interglacial. Extending these analyses, Abbas et al. collected and dated sediments from three sites along the Jordan River Valley: Wadi Hasa, Gregra, and Wadi Gharandal. The sediments contained organic matter, muddy sands, and marl – a silty carbonate material associated with water bodies – and some contained small rocks indicative of flash flooding and a landslide. Wadi Gharandal sediments also contained three stone tools, including two Levallois flakes dated to around 84,000 years ago – suggesting that human passage through the region happened much earlier than previous records imply.

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Wadi Rum, in southern Jordan. ChiemSeherin, Pixabay

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Article Source: AMERICAN ASSOCIATION FOR THE ADVANCEMENT OF SCIENCE (AAAS) news release.

Oldest hunter-gatherer basketry in southern Europe, 9,500 years old, discovered in Cueva de los Murciélagos, Albuñol (Granada, Spain)

AUTONOMOUS UNIVERSITY OF BARCELONA—A team of scientists, led by researchers from the Universidad de Alcalá (UAH) and the Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona (UAB), has discovered and analyzed the first direct evidence of basketry among hunter-gatherer societies and early farmers in southern Europe in the Cueva of the Bats of Albuñol (Granada, Spain).

Their work, published in the prestigious journal Science Advances , analyzes 76 objects made of organic materials (wood, reed and esparto) discovered during 19th century mining activities in the Granada cave. The researchers studied the raw materials and technology and carried out carbon-14 dating, which revealed that the set dates to the early and middle Holocene period, between 9,500 and 6,200 years ago. This is the first direct evidence of basketry made by Mesolithic hunter-gatherer societies in southern Europe and a unique set of other organic tools associated with early Neolithic farming communities, such as sandals and a wooden mace.

As researcher of the Prehistory Department of the University of Alcalá Francisco Martínez Sevilla explains, ”the new dating of the esparto baskets from the Cueva de los Murciélagos of Albuñol opens a window of opportunity to understanding the last hunter-gatherer societies of the early Holocene. The quality and technological complexity of the basketry makes us question the simplistic assumptions we have about human communities prior to the arrival of agriculture in southern Europe. This work and the project that is being developed places the Cueva de los Murciélagos as a unique site in Europe to study the organic materials of prehistoric populations.”

Cueva de los Murciélagos is located on the coast of Granada, to the south of the Sierra Nevada and 2 kilometers from the town of Albuñol. The cave opens on the right side of the Barranco de las Angosturas, at an altitude of 450 meters above sea level and about 7 kilometers from the current coastline. It is one of the most emblematic prehistoric archaeological sites of the Iberian Peninsula due to the rare preservation of organic materials, which until this study had only been attributed to the Neolithic. The objects made of perishable materials were discovered by the mining activities of the 19th century and were documented and recovered by Manuel de Góngora y Martínez, later becoming part of the first collections of the National Archaeological Museum of Madrid.

As detailed by María Herrero Otal, co-author of the work and researcher at the Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona, ​​“the esparto grass objects from Cueva de los Murciélagos are the oldest and best-preserved set of plant fiber materials in southern Europe so far known . The technological diversity and the treatment of the raw material documented demonstrates the ability of prehistoric communities to master this type of craftsmanship, at least since 9,500 years ago, in the Mesolithic period. Only one type of technique related to hunter-gatherers has been identified, while the typological, technological and treatment range of esparto grass was extended during the Neolithic from 7,200 to 6,200 years before the present.”

The work is part of the project “From museums to territory: updating the study of the Bat Cave of Albuñol (Granada)” (MUTERMUR), which has been funded by the Community of Madrid and the University of Alcalá. The objective of this project is the holistic study of the site and its material record, applying the latest archaeometric techniques and generating quality scientific data. The project also included the collaboration of the National Archaeological Museum, the Archaeological and Ethnological Museum of Granada, the City Council of Albuñol and the owners of the cave.

“The results of this work and the finding of the oldest basketry in southern Europe give more meaning, if possible, to the phrase written by Manuel de Góngora in his work Prehistoric Antiquities of Andalusia (1868): ‘the now forever famous Cueva de los Bats’”, the authors highlight.

In addition to Francisco Martínez Sevilla and María Herrero Otal, specialists from different disciplines such as Prehistory, Geology, Physics-Chemistry, Carpology or Anthracology participated in this interdisciplinary study: María Martín-Seijo (Universidad de Cantabria); Jonathan Santana (University of Las Palmas de Gran Canaria); José A. Lozano Rodríguez (Oceanographic Center of the Canary Islands); Ruth Maicas Ramos (National Archaeological Museum); Miriam Cubas, Rosa Barroso Bermejo, Primitiva Bueno Ramírez and Rodrigo de Balbín Behrmann (University of Alcalá); Anna Homs; Rafael M. Martínez Sánchez (University of Córdoba) Ingrid Bertin (Université Côte d’Azur); Antonio M. Álvarez-Valero (University of Salamanca); Leonor Peña Chocarro (Institute of History, Higher Council for Scientific Research); Javier L. Carrasco Rus, Rubén Pardo Martínez and Mercedes Murillo Barroso (University of Granada); Eva Fernández Domínguez (Durham University); Manuel Altamirano García (Distance University); Mercedes Iriarte Cela (SDLE Technology and Research Center); Carmen Alfaro Giner (University of Valencia); Antoni Palomo Pérez and Raquel Piqué Huerta (Autonomous University of Barcelona).

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Interior of the Cueva de los Murciélagos de Albuñol. Blas Ramos Rodríguez. CC BY-ND

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Wooden mace and esparto sandals, dating back to the Neolithic 6,200 years ago (right). MUTERMUR Project. CC BY-ND

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Oldest Mesolithic baskets in southern Europe, 9,500 years old. MUTERMUR Project, CC BY-ND

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Article Sources: AUTONOMOUS UNIVERSITY OF BARCELONA news release

New rooms discovered in Sahura’s Pyramid

UNIVERSITY OF WÜRZBURG—An Egyptian-German mission led by Egyptologist Dr. Mohamed Ismail Khaled of the Department of Egyptology at Julius-Maximilians-Universität of Würzburg (JMU) has made a significant discovery within Sahura’s Pyramid.

The exploration has unearthed a number of storage rooms that had not been documented before. This discovery sheds new light on the architecture of the pyramid of Sahura, the second king of the Fifth Dynasty (2400 BC) and the first king to be buried at Abusir.

The conservation and restoration project inside Sahura’s pyramid, initiated in 2019 and supported by the Antiquities Endowment Fund (AEF) of the American Research Center in Egypt (ARCE), aimed to safeguard the substructure of Sahura’s pyramid. The team’s efforts focused on cleaning the interior rooms, stabilizing the pyramid from inside, and preventing further collapse. In the process, the team succeeded in securing the pyramid’s burial chambers, which had previously been inaccessible.

A Briton with the Right Hunch

During the restoration work, the team discovered the original dimensions and was able to uncover the floor plan of the antechamber, which had deteriorated over time. Consequently, the destroyed walls were replaced with new retaining walls. The eastern wall of the antechamber was badly damaged, and only the northeast corner and about 30 centimeters of the eastern wall were still visible.

Traces of a low passageway that John Perring had already noticed during an excavation in 1836 continued to be excavated. Perring had mentioned that this passage had been full of debris and rubbish and had been impassable due to decay. The British Egyptologist suspected that it might have led to storage rooms. However, during further exploration of the pyramid by Ludwig Borchardt in 1907, these assumptions were called into question – other experts joined his opinion.

All the more surprising was the find of the Egyptian-German team, which actually discovered traces of a passage. Thereby proving that the observations made during Perring’s exploration were correct. The work was continued, and the passage was uncovered. Thus, eight storerooms have been discovered so far. Although the northern and southern parts of these magazines, especially the ceiling and the original floor, are badly damaged, remnants of the original walls and parts of the floor can still be seen.

Modern Technology in Use

Careful documentation of the floor plan and dimensions of each storage room has greatly enhanced the researchers’ understanding of the pyramid’s interior. During restoration, a balance between preservation and presentation was pursued to ensure the structural integrity of the rooms while making them accessible for future study and potentially the public.

Using state-of-the-art technology, including 3D laser scanning with a ZEB Horizon portable LiDAR scanner from GeoSLAM, the Egyptian-German team collaborated with the 3D Geoscan team to conduct detailed surveys inside the pyramid. This advanced technology enabled comprehensive mapping of both the extensive external areas and the narrow corridors and chambers inside. The frequent scans provide real-time updates of progress and create a permanent record of exploration efforts.

This groundbreaking project represents a significant milestone in the understanding of the Sahura pyramid and its historical significance. The discovery and restoration of the storerooms is expected to revolutionize the view of historical development of pyramid structures and challenge existing paradigms in the field.

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From left to right: Exterior view of the pyramid. A passage secured with steel beams. One of the discovered storage rooms. Mukhranov A.N., Public Domain, Wikimeida Commons

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Article Source: UNIVERSITY OF WÜRZBURG news release

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Pollen analysis suggests peopling of Siberia and Europe by modern humans occurred during a major Pleistocene warming spell

UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS, LAWRENCE — It’s an Ice Age mystery that’s been debated for decades among anthropologists: Exactly when and how did the flow of Homo sapiens in Eurasia happen? Did a cold snap or a warming spell drive early human movement from Africa into Europe and Asia?

A new study* appearing in Science Advances compares Pleistocene vegetation communities around Lake Baikal in Siberia, Russia, to the oldest archeological traces of Homo sapiens in the region. The researchers use the “remarkable evidence” to tell a compelling story from 45,000-50,000 years ago with new detail: how the first humans migrated across Europe and Asia.

The new pollen data suggest warming temperatures supported forests that expanded into Siberia and facilitated early human migration there, at roughly the same time as more and western areas of Eurasia.

“This research addresses long-standing debates regarding the environmental conditions that early Homo sapiens faced during their migration into Europe and Asia around 40,000 to 50,000 years ago,” said co-author Ted Goebel, professor of anthropology at the University of Kansas. “It provides critical insights into environmental conditions at Lake Baikal, using pollen records to reveal surprising warmth during this period.”

Indeed, the pollen data suggest that the dispersal of people occurred during some of the highest temperatures in the late Pleistocene, which also would have featured higher humidity. The ancient pollen record shows coniferous forests and grasslands characterized the region, able to support foraging and hunting by humans. Goebel said the environmental data, combined with archeological evidence, tell a new story.

“This contradicts some recent archaeological perspectives in Europe,” said the KU researcher. “The key factor here is accurate dating, not just of human fossils and animal bones associated with the archaeology of these people, but also of environmental records, including from pollen. What we have presented is a robust chronology of environmental changes in Lake Baikal during this time period, complemented by a well-dated archaeological record of Homo sapiens’ presence in the region.”

Goebel’s collaborators were lead author Koji Shichi of the Forestry and Forest Products Research Institute in Kochi, Japan; Masami Izuho of Tokyo Metropolitan University, Hachioji, Japan; and Kenji Kashiwaya of Kanazawa University, Kanazawa, Japan.

While the pollen analysis was carried out in Japan, Goebel and Izuho tied the pollen data to important evidence in the archeological record of early human migration. Goebel said the emergence of full-fledged Homo sapiens in the archaeological record corresponds to changes in culture and behavior. Early modern humans of this period were making stone tools on long, slender blades, working bone, antler and ivory to craft tools — including some of the first bone needles with carved eyelets for sewing and early bone and antler spear points.

“Some of us argue that as the anatomical changes were occurring, as evidenced by the fossil record, there was a simultaneous shift in behavior and cognition,” Goebel said. “These early humans were becoming more creative, innovative and adaptable. This is when we start to observe significant changes in the archaeological record, such as cave paintings. We also find mobile art, like the early carvings known as Venus figurines. In Central Europe, there’s even an ivory sculpture dating back to this early period, depicting a lion-headed man. It’s not just replicating nature; it’s about creative expression, inventing new things, exploring new places.”

At least one human bone has been found in the region that dates to the era, according to the KU researcher.

“There is one human fossil from Siberia, although not from Lake Baikal but farther west, at a place called Ust’-Ishim,” Goebel said. “Morphologically, it is human, but more importantly, it’s exceptionally well-preserved. It has been directly radiocarbon-dated and has yielded ancient DNA, confirming it as a representative of modern Homo sapiens, distinct from Neanderthals or Denisovans, or other pre-modern archaic humans.”

Goebel said the earliest human inhabitants of the area likely would have lived in extended nuclear families or small bands, as they seem to have done in other areas of Eurasia. But because so much archeological evidence is degraded, it’s difficult to know with certainty.

“At Ust’-Ishim in Siberia, we have evidence of a fully modern human co-existing with the sites we’ve been discussing,” he said. “However, Ust’-Ishim was an isolated discovery, found by geologists eroding from a riverbank. We lack information about its archaeological context, whether it was part of a settlement or simply a solitary bone washed downstream. Consequently, linking that single individual to the archaeological sites in the Baikal region is tenuous — do they represent the same population? We think so, but definitely need more evidence.”

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Map showing theorized migration routes of early Homo sapiens from Africa across Eurasia. Ted Goebel

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Chikoi River valley, Trans-Baikal region. Ted Goebel

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Article Source: UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS news release