Good news! @HarvardSoHP, MHAAM, & the Historical Ice Core Project are on PBS this month! “The End of the Romans” explores how #archaeoscience is changing our understanding of the fall of Rome. Available until Nov 23!
https://t.co/3pQxe67X0E
Family, Food, & Health in Bronze Age Greece: New Light from the Max Planck-Harvard Research Center
Philipp Stockhammer @stockhammerph, Professor of Prehistoric #Archaeology, Ludwig Maximilian University & Deputy Director (MHAAM) at @Harvard 11/14, 5PM.
Reception to follow
.@HarvardSoHP & MHAAM take deep satisfaction in the 2022 @NobelPrize in Physiology/Medicine awarded to @SvantePaabo Dir. of @MPI_EVA_Leipzig, pioneer in the study of ancient DNA to reconstruct the human past. Dr. Pääbo is one of the inventors of the new Science of the Human Past!
Clap de fin d'une expérience inoubliable. Echanges fructueux et perspectives enthousiasmantes autour de la santé, des vulnérabilités et des pandémies.
MERCI @ProfMMcCormick et Solenn Troadec.
See you soon John Harvard !
@Inrap@Blanchard_Inrap
I. Catteddu M-C Truc
[💬 #Conférence] Approches (bio)archéologiques : la maladie et la mort dans la France du haut Moyen Âge
Par @vdelattreinrap, @Blanchard_Inrap, Isabelle Catteddu et Marie-Cécile Truc
📍 À @Harvard, demain 24/06 à 21 h (heure de Paris), en direct sur Zoom👉https://t.co/1Rnuf90Wlb
A 🧵for the next @HarvardSoHP public program on June 24 (in-person and virtual): Approches (bio)archéologiques: la maladie et la mort dans la France du haut Moyen-Âge/
(Bio)archaeological approaches to disease and death in early medieval France
The lab of @HarvardHEB professor David Reich has sequenced more than 16,000 #ancient humans from around the world. The #DNA shows interbreeding among modern humans, #Neanderthals, and another archaic human, the Denisovans.
https://t.co/Klgz0WCscA
A 🧵for the next @HarvardSoHP public program on June 24 (in-person and virtual): Approches (bio)archéologiques: la maladie et la mort dans la France du haut Moyen-Âge/
(Bio)archaeological approaches to disease and death in early medieval France
Our paper published today @nature describes an ancient epidemic that occurred in central Eurasia in the years 1338-1339. We find that the epidemic was caused by plague (Y. pestis) and that it was associated with the beginnings of the Black Death. https://t.co/nWzObniTT3
(Bio)archaeological approaches to disease and death in early medieval France.
Conference @Harvard, June 24, 2022, 3-4PM
@Harvard_History.
Sponsored by the Max Planck-Harvard Research Center (MHAAM), SoHP, w/ support of Lounsbery Foundation, fostering French-American cooperation.
Friday, June 24, 2022
3:00 pm – 4:30 pm EDT (followed by public reception)
CGIS South: Belfer Case Study Room (Lower Level)
1730 Cambridge Street, Cambridge, MA
The program will be conducted in English.
Hybrid In-Person and Virtual! Zoom webinar link:
https://t.co/kmPuc5XD7s
A 🧵for the next @HarvardSoHP public program on June 24 (in-person and virtual): Approches (bio)archéologiques: la maladie et la mort dans la France du haut Moyen-Âge/
(Bio)archaeological approaches to disease and death in early medieval France
Solenn Troadec, Postdoctoral Fellow, Initiative for the Science of the Human Past, Harvard University
Marie-Cécile Truc, Responsable d’opération et étude du petit mobilier haut Moyen Âge - Moyen Âge, Ingénieure de recherche Inrap, UMR 6273 CRAHAM Université de Caen