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It is also know as the Löwenmensch figurine. It was found in a cave in Germany in 1939. It is made out of mammoth ivory and stands at about 30cm tall (about 12 inches). 2/
Found by divers off the coast of Antikythera, Greece in 1901, the device is effectively an ancient, analogue computer. It was made of a series of fine tooth gears, likely working together to show celestial movements i.e moon/planets. Unfortunately, a lot of it is missing. 2/
In the town of Novgorod, they sometimes come across preserved birch bark. People used this bark to write on, including Onfim! Archaeologists have found 17 pieces of bark marked with his homework. But what do these inscriptions reveal? A young boy who disliked school! 2/
https://twitter.com/PAKEP_KSA/status/1886734612589896034
The vast majority of Bronze Age tombs in the region were disturbed in antiquity or were reused for later Iron Age burials. Furthermore, the harsh environment of NW Arabia meant that preservation of human remains was particularly poor. So it took a long time! 2/
One thing archaeologists regularly utilised is called Ethnography. This is where we look at how modern cultures do all types of things- including moving big stones. It ends up that even over the last 100 years, we have tonnes of ethnographic evidence including videos. 2/
Today we will look at the development of male sculptures. After the collapse of the Bronze Age cultures, and Greece's resurgence, stone sculptures start appearing in the mid-late 7th century. Here is a favourite of mine- the New York Kouros from c.600-580 BCE. 2/
https://twitter.com/hughs_news/status/1873924400690717042
A huge amount of how we communicate is through gesture. In fact, it’s the first form of communication we learn as children, before we can talk. Think of babies reaching for a parent or wanting food. Even as adults, when we communicate, we utilise gesture subconsciously. 2/
https://twitter.com/BrightInsight6/status/1823019071333638582This is the Vatican. Notice that obelisk in the centre. It is from Egypt. It weighs 330 tonnes. It was raisedon September 10th 1586. Using modern 16th century technology, they moved and lifted the stone. You can see drawings of the event. But that’s not a mystery. 2/

https://twitter.com/brightinsight6/status/1821903629659599127-Their clothes are clean‼️Yes, sometimes archaeology is very dirty. First picture, my face after excavating a hearth a fireplace). Fine, black, silt. Stuck to everything. 2/

https://twitter.com/BrightInsight6/status/1820109942474657884Firstly, who am I? To some I am an keyboard archaeologist who isn't in charge of sites. But my CV tells me I have been a field archaeologists for 20+ years and run a pretty major archaeological project, which uses many of the techniques listed below. 2/
https://twitter.com/BrightInsight6/status/1817963773917003894But who are the others watching- clearly guests of the excavation team. I mean the guy in the grey/black shirt on left is clearly talking. Guests visit all the time, VIPs, other archaeologists, lots of people. It happens. 2/