quinta-feira, 2 de junho de 2011

O passado escondido no Museu Machado de Castro

O Museu Nacional Machado de Castro é palco das escavações arqueológicas da igreja românica de São João, que remonta ao século XII.
A trabalhar nas escavações estão os alunos do mestrado em Arqueologia da UC, uma junção possível graças a uma parceria entre a Universidade e o Museu.

Ancient cave women 'left childhood homes'

"Mrs Ples" is the most famous example of
A. africanus from the Sterkfontein cave site
By Neil Bowdler, Science reporter, BBC News

Analysis of early human-like populations in southern Africa suggests females left their childhood homes, while males stayed at home.

An international team examined tooth samples for metallic traces which can be linked to the geological areas in which individuals grew up.

The conclusion was that while most the males lived and died around the same river valley, the females moved on.

Similar patterns have been observed in chimpanzees, bonobos and modern humans.

Details of the study are published in a letter in Nature.

Isotopic test
The researchers looked at the Sterkfontein and Swartkrans cave sites, north-west of the South African city of Johannesburg.

The sites contain specimens of two distinct early "hominin" species, Australopithecus africanus, a possible direct ancestor of modern humans who lived around 2-3 million years ago, and Paranthropus robustus, who lived some 1.2-2 million years ago, but who is not believed to be our direct ancestor.

They took teeth from eight A.africanus and 11 P.robustus individuals from the cave sites, and removed tiny enamel fragments by laser, to minimise damage.

These fragments were then analysed to test for particular isotopes, or forms, of the metallic element strontium, which can reveal the geological region where individuals were raised.

This is because particular isotopes of strontium dominant within a geological region are digested by individuals living there and incorporated into their tooth enamel.


A third molar from Australopithecus africanus from which a sample was taken for the study
The results showed that the larger teeth, presumed to belong to males, showed most of these individuals lived and died in the region where the Sterkfontein and Swartkrans cave sites are located.

Most of the smaller teeth, presumed to be female, showed that these individuals grew up outside the region.

"What we were trying to do was to find out how these two hominins - two different species living in different time periods - were ranging around and using the landscape in the Sterkfontein valley and beyond," Professor Julia Lee-Thorp of Oxford University told BBC News.

While initial research was aimed at looking at seasonal variations in diet, the isotopic tests pointed them instead to apparent gender variations.

"What [the results] show was that the females were more likely to come from outside the dolomite valley region than the males. It wasn't too far away but it wasn't the same natal group in which they grew up.

"We don't know whether they drifted, or they went across deliberately, or they were abducted; we have no way of knowing that kind of detail, but on the whole most of the females came from somewhere else."

Professor Lee-Thorp said the patterns resemble those seen in chimpanzees, where males tend to stay within the extended family group, hunting together within a single territory, whereas females are forced to leave, possibly to avoid inter-breeding.

But that pattern differs from the one observed in gorillas, where a dominant "silverback" male usually mates with multiple females, and other males are forced to leave the group.

This does not mean, she believes, that the males within these hominin groups were necessarily taking any great role in child-rearing.

"I think that's taking the information too far, quite frankly," she said. "In chimpanzees that doesn't happen. In that case the females are leaving, but the males take little interest in nurturing the children."

Small sample
The sample size is of course very small, with specimens rare and samples for experimentation rarer. The researchers also admit that data from these two separate species living at two separate times was pooled to provide results which were statistically significant.

"We're very obviously constrained by the amount of material we have for destructive analysis," said researcher Professor Darryl de Ruiter of Texas A&M University, during a telephone conference dedicated to the Nature paper.

"In terms of comparing the two species themselves, we did analyse them separately but [the] sample size was so small within these individuals that they were not robust statistics... and we did have to combine these samples in order to get a valid statistical result."

Professor Peter Wheeler of Liverpool John Moores University said that both sample size and methodology were issues to consider.

"You've got to be cautious when drawing conclusions from a relatively small sample. You've got even greater concerns when combining data from more than one species," he said.

However, he said, "if the differences are consistent, then it's extremely interesting and worthy of further work".

He added: "Isotopic work is providing a lot of information about the movement of modern humans in the archaeological record and if people are able to get consistent results further back into prehistory, it could provide information which is potentially useful."

Quaternary International





Shell Midden Research: An Interdisciplinary Agenda for the Quaternary and Social Sciences
Edited by Andrea Balbo, Marco Madella, Ivan Briz Godino and Myrian Álvarez

Lithic Technology



Articles
  • Possible functions of grooved ground stones from Baking Pot, Belize by James J. Aimers, W. James Stemp, and Jaime J. Awe
  • A technological evaluation of the flint blade core reduction sequence at Wadi El-Sheikh, Middle Egyptby Theresa Barket and Robert M. Yohe II
  • On cache recognition: An example from the area of the Chico River (Patagonia, Argentina) by Nora Viviana Franco, Alicia Castro, Natalia Cirigliano, Marilana Martucci, and Agustin Acevedo
  • “I’ll have a flake to go, please”
  • Expedient core technology in the Late Bronze (c. 1100–800 cal BC) and Earliest Iron (c. 800–600 cal BC) ages of eastern England
  • Andrew P. McLaren

BOOK REVIEWS
  • Tools and Economy of the Eneolithic Farmers of South-Eastern Europe, by N.N. Skakun reviewed by Mikhail Zhilin
  • Prehension of Hafting Traces on Flint Tools: A Methodology by Veerle Rots, reviewed by Grant S. McCall

Quaternary Science Reviews






Early Human Evolution in the Western Palaearctic: Ecological Scenarios
Edited by Jose Carrion, James Rose and Chris Stringer

Mesolithic Miscellany



Bicho, N., Cascalheira, J., Marreiros, J., Pereira, T. 2011. The 2008-2010 excavations of Cabeço da Amoreira, Muge, Portugal. Mesolithic Miscellany, Vol. 21, n.º.2: 3-13.

quarta-feira, 25 de maio de 2011

Archaeological Prospection


Archeological Papers of the American Anthropological Association


Festival Britânico de Arqueologia – O Dia da Arqueologia 2011

O Dia da Arqueologia 2011 é um projecto online que permitirá aos arqueólogos, que trabalham em todo o mundo, registrarem o que eles fazem num dia, 29 de julho de 2011. Esta data coincide com o Festival Britânico de Arqueologia, que vai de 16 a 31 de julho de 2011. Arqueólogos que participam no projecto poderão registrar o seu dia através de fotografias, vídeos e posts escritos.


Para mais informações:

Journal of Human Evolution


Journées de l' archéologie 2011

Mais informações em: http://journees-archeologie.inrap.fr

9º Encontro de Arqueologia do Algarve

É com prazer que se anuncia, que o 9º Encontro de Arqueologia do Algarve terá este ano lugar nos dias 20, 21 e 22 de Outubro, na Fissul em Silves.

Trata-se de uma iniciativa da Câmara Municipal de Silves, que conta com a colaboração da Universidade do Algarve, Instituto de Gestão do Património Arquitectónico e Arqueológico,IP e Direcção Regional de Cultura do Algarve.

O evento assume novamente o seu formato regular objectivando-se na apresentação de comunicações e posters resultantes de trabalhos arqueológicos (de campo ou estudos) ocorridos na ou sobre a região do Algarve no biénio de 2010/2011.

Desta forma, aceitam-se propostas de comunicações e posters até ao dia 24 de Junho. A(s) proposta(s) deve(m) conter:
- o nome do autor(es),
- o tipo de apresentação pretendida (comunicação/poster),
- o título e
- um resumo que não exceda os 2500 caracteres.

Esclarecimentos adicionais poderão ser solicitados, através dos seguintes contactos:
Sector de Arqueologia da Divisão de Património Histórico-Arqueológico e Museus
Câmara Municipal de Silves, Praça do Município, 8300-117 Silves
Email: maria.gonçalves@cm-silves.pt
Telefone directo : 282444100

Göbekli Tepe

The Birth of Religion

We used to think agriculture gave rise to cities and later to writing, art, and religion. Now the world’s oldest temple suggests the urge to worship sparked civilization.

By Charles C. Mann
Photograph by Vincent J. Musi


Notícia em nationalgeographic

terça-feira, 24 de maio de 2011

Uma vitória...

Participação da arqueóloga Leonor Medeiros na Final do FameLab, que venceu. Em menos de três minutos, como a arqueologia pode ajudar a contar a história de um crime com 5000 anos e de uma ida à praia algumas horas atrás.

"Indústria Lítica - Aplicação prática"