I'm especially grateful for the opportunity to publish my chapter on Dr. Sally Binford “… and his wife Sally”: The Binford Legacy and Uncredited Work in Archaeology https://t.co/xfjfTDEorA
This is my supplier and during the past winter they raised my standing charge by 25% while my roommate and I bundled up in blankets in our 10°C living room. These reported profits are absolutely heinous, and the entire British energy supply industry is run by ghouls.
Many thanks due to our editors at A3PA, the organisers of this volume including @AprilMBeisaw, @IDontDigDinos, @kvkirako and Ryan Wheeler, and reviewers, and fellow authors.
Finally, thanks to Sally Rosen Binford-- your memory is most certainly a blessing.
Extremely exciting news-- after years of hard work by the entire editorial and writing team our A3PA special volume "Sins of Our Ancestors (And of Ourselves): Confronting Archaeological Legacies" is now published and available for reading https://t.co/KelnKc4mv9
Make sure to check out all of the articles in this incredible volume-- focusing on everything from Indigenous advocacy, colonial legacies in archaeological science, unacknowledged labor from women and racialized archaeologists, and more.
Salmon Fact:
On February 2, 1300 two salmon given to the Earl of Lancaster were valued at £1. That's approximately £914.30 in today's money. In 1300 that would be equivalent to approximately 100 days of wages for a skilled laborer.
@tinysapien Listen, the man translated a 13th century poem from Old French into a much more understandable Middle English, and salmon are involved very briefly
Almost as heartbreaking as Sinead's untimely death is the fact that the same media outlets who vilified her for years will be publicly lamenting her loss, in an ultimate act of hypocrisy. She was a legend and deserved to be recognized as such far earlier in her career.