Traces of stone tools on prehistoric human teeth from daily activities and cultural practices
'Non-masticatory striations on human teeth from the British Upper Palaeolithic to the Neolithic'
#toothwear#archaeology#prehistory
https://t.co/EtVMteo91i
The Anthropology team visited the excavation site at Barnham, Suffolk last week. An incredibly rich Lower Palaeolithic site with Clactonian archaeology, flora, and fauna, telling us about the lives of Middle Pleistocene Britons.
We are thrilled to support Dr. Kay Behrensmeyer's amazing project with the @museumsofkenya and the Smithsonian. This taphonomy teaching collection will have a large impact, and we are proud to be part of it!
Come join the Centre for Human Evolution Research @NHM_London
Applications are now open for a research assistant position mainly focused on collecting data from CT scans and other digital imagery 💀🩻
Deadline 16 June 2024
https://t.co/hEMLqZPFi4
What a privilege to have taken part in some of the recent fieldwork at Shanidar Cave, and to see the amazing work of my colleagues showcased in this documentary. I cannot wait to be back in the Zagros mountains for this year's field season!
https://t.co/xAn1ksEQOp
"Mapping Interactions of H. neanderthalensis and Homo sapiens from the Fossil and Genetic Records" @ChrisStringer65@LucileCrete https://t.co/itWthZr4Nl
It had to happen: I'm publishing a children's book about dinosaurs! 🙈 An unpretentious little picture book in French🇫🇷 available today from Merci les Livres editions! Recommended for ages 6 and up, but even adults can obviously learn a thing or two ;)🦖🦕https://t.co/UjI9zJNrZp
Incredibly busy night on Wednesday for 'Valentine's at the Museum'. Our Anthropology Scientists [Emma Bird, Lucile Créte, and Karen Swan] met hundreds of couples and chatted all things love, pair-bonding, and mating across the world of primates.
Brilliant time with Karen Swan discussing 'Love, bonding, and mating behaviours in primates' with visitors at the Natural History Museum for this Valentine's day after-hours event.
Join our Anthropology Scientists at the after-hours event 'Valentine's at the Museum'. Explore 'The Origins of Human Love: Pair-bonding in Primate and Human Groups' and 'Tinder: Human-Neanderthal Interbreeding in the Age of Fire' at our Science Stations https://t.co/puqS8wFKcn
One does not look like the other... 🙈 Our paper on differences between the maxillae of wild and captive chimpanzees is now available online @JAnatomy! Open access courtesy of @NHM_Library.
https://t.co/8ekaMhUPBq
Good start of 2024!
Our thoughts on bone modifications at Boxgrove and Gough's Cave.
Bone tools, carnivore chewing and heavy percussion: assessing conflicting interpretations of Lower and Upper Palaeolithic bone assemblages | Royal Society Open Science https://t.co/dXXJXqXjkb
Bone tools, carnivore chewing and heavy percussion: assessing conflicting interpretations of Lower and Upper Palaeolithic bone assemblages | Royal Society Open Science https://t.co/UMdsHu7JK8