NEW PODCAST EPISODE! We chatted w/ Dr. Bill Chopik about a recent study of how other people judge your personality based on your tattoos! https://t.co/iwUuuYIPw9
Our peer-to-peer tattoo research podcast is back for another season w/ catchup interview w/ prehistoric archaeologist Aaron Deter-Wolf. Check out his Instagram @archaeologyink ‘TaHN 34: Tattoo Tools and Archaeology with Aaron Deter-Wolf’ is on #SoundCloud https://t.co/bfCAK27KSS
The word "tattoo" comes from an 18th century Polynesian word, "tatau" meaning "to strike." The more you know! Awesome info from OP below.
.
#Repost @archaeologyink (@get_repost)
・・・
This wood handled tool with four metal tines lashed to the tip was u… https://t.co/GhEL8rsQzn
Tzi The Iceman Really Got His Tattoos—“Our study shows that the past 30 years of conventional wisdom as to how the Iceman was tattooed is incorrect,” says archaeologist Aaron Deter-Wolf of the Tennessee Division of Archaeology in ... https://t.co/47TVdl0nn5:
World’s Oldest Tattoo Needle💉
In 2021, archaeologists Aaron Deter-Wolf of the Tennessee Division of Archaeology in Nashville and his colleagues identified sharpened turkey leg bones found in Tennessee as the world's oldest known tattooing tools, dating back 3,600 to 5,520 years ago.
Tetování není jen moderní záležitostí – lidé si zdobili tělo už před tisíci lety, a to nástroji z kostí, klů či kaktusových trnů. Archeolog Aaron Deter-Wolf dnes zkoumá tyto prastaré techniky a rekonstruuje, jak dávní umělci vnášeli symboly do kůže.
https://t.co/LewcZSvZC5
Archaeologist Aaron Deter-Wolf and tattoo artist Danny Riday teamed up for a unique—and permanent—experiment to better understand how ancient tattoos were made.
https://t.co/NivlcLQFVw
New episode! @HolyLaetoli & I interview cognitive archaeologist Thomas Wynn! 228: Dr. Thomas Wynn talks Neanderthal Cognition, Nightmares, and How to Make Glue’ is on #SoundCloud https://t.co/0Q58McH48H
New episode! @HolyLaetoli & I interview @MeredithAulds 228: Meredith Aulds: midwifery integration and home-to-hospital transfer during childbirth’ is on #SoundCloud https://t.co/vOzU1diHtv
Facial tattoos and decorations are a little known aspect of 17th century England. In 1653 John Bulwer tried to systematically document bodily decoration and how English fashions were influenced by New World societies. In "Anthropometamorphosis: Man Transform’d: Or, the Artificiall Changling"
Check out newest episode from Tattooing & Human Nature Podcast (formerly Inking of Immunity) in which we chat with medical tattooist Stacie Becker about nipple-areola complex, scar, & other fascinating forms of tattooing that most people never consider. https://t.co/g2wTmIDZvM