I’m an archaeologist who writes Twitter threads. They’re a window into the past looking at ancient people & a behind-the-scenes tour of 21st century #archaeology
We’re all familiar with the popular picture of ancient Greece, from the Mask of Agamemnon to the Parthenon in Athens
But, to me, the most exciting revolution sweeping archaeology is a shift to ordinary people. With new questions & methods, we can see them in higher resolution
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I reveal ancient people through their trash: the fragmented bones of the animals they’ve eaten
These bones show how people interacted with the natural environment and tell us about the sacrificial feasts that brought together whole communities
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#ZOOCRETE focuses on animal bones from Crete from the end of the Bronze Age down to Roman times (ca. 1200-50 BCE)
This is an important period in ancient Greece with clear evidence for climate change and urbanism, topics that matter today
What do animal bones & teeth tell us?
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As the Bronze Age ended, the climate became drier. My last article suggested that people living in especially dry areas shifted their herds to include more hardy goats
I will test & expand on this hypothesis to see how humans have adapted in the face of harsh climate change
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After 500 years of “unstable settlements”, a period of urbanism begins in the Archaic and Classical periods (700-300 BCE). City-states proliferated forming resilient communities
A key ingredients to these communities were citizen feasts with plentiful wine and meat
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The goal of #ZOOCRETE is to examine these important cultural trends, using the island of Crete as a self-contained case-study
Specifically, I’ll be examining animal remains from the important cities of Azoria, Knossos, Itanos, and Praisos and situate them among published data
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Given the abundance of beautiful art and texts in ancient Greece, animal bones have remained understudied until recently
#ZOOCRETE will mark the first intensive examination of animal remains in a single region of ancient Greece using 21st century methods
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Traditional analyses of animal remains provide important information. We don’t just count animals (though that’s important)
My custom database allows me to plot butchery marks across an animal skeleton to tight zones
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As I’ve published from Azoria, butchery styles are drastically different when comparing bones thrown out after a feast with those thrown out at home
The butchers who prepared animals for feasts were professional, using cleavers to create consistent cuts of meat
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It’s not just the bones: teeth are especially useful. Just like humans, younger animals shed their baby teeth and grow adult teeth. As they eat, these teeth wear down
Studying teeth tells us the age of animals. I bet even you can rank these goat jaws from youngest to oldest
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This is valuable information. The ages at which animals are slaughtered can inform us about animal management strategies
For example, a strategy optimizing dairy will often slaughter the males at a very young age, so humans can drink the milk instead of the young animal
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#ZOOCRETE will take the analysis of animal management a step further through analyzing the isotope signatures of animals
The ratios of different isotopes in these animal remains reflect their diet and geology
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As an animal drinks water, it absorbs Strontium isotopes of its underlying geology
The types of food it consumes impact the Carbon & Nitrogen isotopes
The season of growth (in its teeth) impacts the Oxygen isotopes, allowing us to link to seasonality
Why does this matter?
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For nearly a 100 years, historians & archaeologists argued over ancient Greek animal management
Did they move larger herds to cooler upland pastures in the summer and the lower pastures in the winter?
It’s how sheep and goats were herded in Greece in recent times
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Or were most animals raised by small farmers who had a few that they kept near their farmland & fed with chaff, fodder, or grasses growing on fallow land? The animals in return would contribute their manure
Scholars of ancient Greece call this the "agropastoral debate"
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Dozens of articles, several books, and thousands of pages of ink have been spilled on this debate
The problem is that it’s hard to get direct evidence for seasonal differences in ancient Greek animal management
But isotope analysis can provide exactly that kind of data
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The isotope signature of a tooth doesn’t change once its formed. So, you can take multiple samples up a tooth and each one will represent a different time of year
Oxygen isotopes can help us determine which season that sample was formed in (winter, summer, etc)
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And then Strontium can detect different geological signatures, so if an animal is moving that can be detected
Carbon & Nitrogen can determine if its diet changes across seasons
This new isotope evidence will provide direct data for seasonal differences in animal management
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Only nine teeth have been analyzed in this way from Bronze Age Knossos by Valasia Isaakidou (who I'll be working with) & colleagues
Similarly, four teeth have been analyzed this way from Hellenistic Thessaly, published by @kat_bish, @GarvieLok, @MargrietHaagsma, & colleagues
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The published data is fascinating and confusing. There’s evidence for a variety of management strategies. But, the sample sizes are low, making it difficult to determine any clear patterns
These early publications are fantastic, but we need more, more, more!
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What makes #ZOOCRETE different is the sample size. The methods I’ve developed are lower resolution, making analysis more affordable
Thanks to the funds from my @MSCActions fellowship I can analyze 52 teeth from four sites
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With these 52 teeth, I’m hoping we can start to answer the raging agropastoral debate. This matters
These analyses will provide needed data to help us understand how ancient Cretans (not cretins!) adapted their food production strategies to climate change and growing cities
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Now, you’re wondering, wouldn’t it be better to sample even more teeth?
Yes! I’m planning to apply for more funding. But I also thought, maybe a few of you would be interested in helping me crowdfund this project
Each tooth analyzed seasonally costs about £275
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Seasonal analyses aren’t the only method
I can answer important questions with non-seasonal sampling of pigs, cows, dogs, deer, & horses, costs about £100 per tooth
No pressure, but if you enjoy reading my threads, I’d love help increasing my sample size
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📷 @NeolithicSheep
I’m committed to sharing archaeology with everyone no matter what
But if you want to chip in to help out an archaeologist, you can buy me a coffee here (which will let me spend my coffee money on research): buymeacoffee.com/flintdibble
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If you want even more nitty gritty details about my research, maybe consider subscribing to my Patreon. I will post advance copies of my writing and more behind-the-scenes looks at what I’m doing
PS Note that I am not a non-profit institution. All funds contributed are taxable income, but I will use them to supersize my research. I will be transparent in how they are used
I enjoy sharing real archaeology for free and hope people see that value and will help out
PPS. I want to be clear that, I have no beef with any other scholars who are working on similar research. I love the groundbreaking work they have done. To me, scholarship is not a competition, but a collaboration. I’ll be in touch with them all as I work on this project
Lastly, while several scholars have told me that sharing archaeology and debunking pseudoarchaeology on social media is valuable
Many others have told me it's a waste of time
Please share this thread to send a message that sharing real #archaeology is valuable
You can get back to the top of the thread easily here
Pseudoarchaeology and fake history causes real harm in our society
Many people think, what’s the harm of hunting for a lost city? It’s entertainment, right! It even exposes children to real science
CW: The harm leads directly to racism and eugenics
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The host of #HuntingAtlantis (@stelpavlou), and unfortunately his wife, have claimed that their TV show inspires children to be curious about real facts, real scientific methods, and real archaeology
This might be true in some cases, but there are problems with this argument
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The show misrepresents researchers. Repeatedly, archaeologists on #HuntingAtlantis present fascinating, new finds
Then, it cuts to the hosts who explain how these finds support their Atlantis theories
The experts have no recourse to reply to this fantastical jump in logic
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I have apparently pissed off some powerful people with my tweets about Atlantis
For a bit my account was locked. i have done nothing offensive. This TV show has misrepresented archaeologists and scholars. If some lawyer asks me, I can prove it
Bring it on, report my account
i'm not sure why someone's wife decided to write a 20 tweet thread about me, with the first tweet about my who my dad was
I am an archaeologist. I am a good archaeologist
Atlantis is just not real
if you really want to make a documentary about Atlantis, and cant even ask your experts about their opinions about Atlantis
I present findings based on years of interdisciplinary research into the archaeological and historical context around Atlantis
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The secrets presented in this thread will anger a large swath of people
They’ve already begun trolling me and other scholars in my cabal after we first spoke up about #Atlantis
BUT I WILL NOT BE SILENCED
the truth will prevail
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We all know the story of Atlantis. It’s been popularized, retold, and adapted in movies, on TV, and in comic books
But the true history is still shocking. It’s tinged by violence and hatred and is part of our own 21st century phenomenon of rampant conspiracy theories
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