Black Women in Palaeo Career Engagement Session
We are proud to announce a P-RI driven session with the sole purpose of highlighting Black women in the Palaeosciences. Join to hear how these inspiring women have navigated academia & built their careers.
RSVP [email protected]
Hey Diggers!!! Keeping in line with our content, check out our co-host @Mavumavu91 in conversation with @KimTommy92 and @ChristaKuljian on racism in science
The HERI women's field camp provides a safe space to speak about issues you can't bring up in the classroom, says Charity Laimon from UCT archaeology.
Learn more about why these camps matter - and why we'll hold them for women every year: https://t.co/YhrFZz7oMC
#WomensMonth
Groenlandaspis riniensis (1997) is the 1st fossil animal to ever have an isiXhosa derived name. Placoderm fishes were the earliest type of jawed vertebrates (animals with backbones) and included the ancestors of all later jawed vertebrates. 🦈🐟
#fossil#fish#scicomm#phdlife
And here’s another important book @Robyn_Angelique mentions in the @DiggingInZA podcast. Scientific Racism in Modern South Africa by Saul Dubow published in https://t.co/aflGjqZg6p