phys.org

ForestOrca, to archaeology in Closer look at the Menga dolmen shows it was one of the greatest engineering feats of the Neolithic
@ForestOrca@kbin.social avatar

The provenance of the stones in the Menga dolmen reveals one of the greatest engineering feats of the Neolithic - https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-023-47423-y

TheBest, to archaeology in Scandinavia's oldest known ship burial is located in mid-Norway
@TheBest@midwest.social avatar

Super cool read. +1 to enthusiastic scientists, without them our world would be nothing.

h3mlocke, to archaeology in Oldest fortresses in the world discovered

That’s pretty old, eh?

ConstipatedWatson, to upliftingnews in Deforestation hits record low in Brazilian Amazon in November

Low does not mean zero, but this is still good news!

Kecessa, to upliftingnews in Deforestation hits record low in Brazilian Amazon in November

Wake me up when reforestation hits record high!

tinycarnivoroussheep, (edited ) to archaeology in Earliest 'true' saddle in east Asia discovered
@tinycarnivoroussheep@possumpat.io avatar

I wondered what the heck a “true” saddle was supposed to be, but it looks like they roughly defined it as a treed (wooden frame) saddle with stirrups attached.

I can’t seem to parse whether the tree came before the stirrup – it’s implied but not stated – but it looks like a single mounting stirrup was invented before paired riding stirrups. I’ve seen a Native American (Cherokee? IIRC dated about Removal Time) saddle that was basically just a tree, presumably used with blankets above and beneath for comfort, without any indication of rings for girth or stirrup attachment, but that doesn’t rule out looping them through the gap between the tree bars (where the spine floats underneath).

It was/is a trend within the last decade or so to use a treeless saddle for more “natural” horsemanship (whatever that means), and I’m sitting here wondering what that means for stirrup attachment. Layered on top of the girth, I hope, for stability. Gonna go fall down the google-hole.

tinycarnivoroussheep,
@tinycarnivoroussheep@possumpat.io avatar

In the interest of horse-girl infodumping, I recall seeing some at the Gilcrease Museum in Tulsa, OK, and luckily they have some pics for their online collection, thank you Gilcrease.

This one is the one I remembered offhand, with a high pommel and cantle (turns out it’s not Cherokee): collections.gilcrease.org/object/84987

Here’s one that used antler for the pommel and cantle, which I thought was neat: collections.gilcrease.org/object/84984

This one actually has stirrups, looks like the girth attachments are more sophicated than my Dunning-Kruger ass imagined, but the stirrup leathers are, in fact, looped over each of the wooden bars: collections.gilcrease.org/object/84985

Immersive_Matthew, to archaeology in Roman 'backwater' bucked Empire's decline, archaeologists reveal

What an interesting article. Love to see this town recreated in VR or even better AR/MR so you can go to this spot and see what it may have looked like mapped to the actual foundations.

NullaFacies, to archaeology in Roman 'backwater' bucked Empire's decline, archaeologists reveal
@NullaFacies@sh.itjust.works avatar

Great read! Fascinating to read about its growth and eventual fall.

abies_exarchia, to archaeology in People, not the climate, found to have caused the decline of the giant mammals

I’ve been thinking about this a lot recently. I don’t think this finding suggests that humans are innately negative forces in ecosystems, but rather that becoming indigenous to a place is a process. As people spread out to new areas, they didn’t have cultural practices that maintained historical ecological relations, and upended some of the ecology in the new places. But over time, it’s in everyone’s best interest to maintain relatively sustainable and cyclical ecological relations for long term survivalship, and that becomes part of the culture and stories, and then you get indigeneity. I think there’s no coincidence that the megafauna that still exists is primarily in the area where humans evolved (subsaharan africa). This is where people have been indigenous to the longest, perhaps before people had the means to extirpate megafauna. And once the cultural indigeneity was in place, there were reasons to not destroy megafauna populations (until the modern colonial era, at least)

Umbrias,

Until a people develop science its pretty silly to me to assign a value judgment to things like this. Invasive species wipe out other species all the time, and did so before humans to boot. Mitigating that is ideal, but you don’t even really conceive of a problem until you have a society which can conceive of the harms and alternatives anyway.

abies_exarchia,

Yeah i think you have a point but I also think humans were moral agents and ascribed value to each other and their environment long long before the advent of science

Umbrias, (edited )

Sure. But until a people can even know what the consequences of their actions are it’s a stretch to judge them harshly.

In this particular case, humans weren’t really moral agents until much later.

RubberElectrons,
@RubberElectrons@lemmy.world avatar

Cool things to ponder while I ride my bicycle to work.

NoTittyPicsPlz,

In the book Sapiens, a Brief History of Humankind, Yuval Noah Harari proposes that one of the problems with humans is that we lept to the top of the foodchain too quickly. Other alpha predators like lions got there by slowly evolving over millions of years, giving themselves time to adjust to their new position and giving nature time to delevope checks and balances. For example, antelope getting faster over time.

Neither we nor nature has adjusted to the new hierarchy. We are unable and unwilling to create enough checks and balances on ourselves so we rape the environment and set whole species to extinction.

When the first humans arrived in Australia almost immediately all the large mammals were wiped out. They didn’t have time to learn to fear the tiny little apes newly arrived on their shores.

An interesting point he made is that genetically we are still scavengers. The earliest tools were likely for smashing apart bones to get at the marrow, after other animals had taken their share. We still feel hunted, and it could be that a large part of anxiety and depression we see could be attributed to our insecurity at our place in the world.

If you once again look at a lion, they are full of confidence and power and all the things we expect to see in an alpha predator. Who knows how long it might take humanity to become comfortable with our place in the world. Who knows if we and the planet will be able to adapt together well enough for that to come to fruition, rather than just becoming another extinct species ourselves.

intensely_human, to archaeology in People, not the climate, found to have caused the decline of the giant mammals

Hasn’t this been known for a long time?

QuarterSwede, to archaeology in Analysis of ancient Scythian leather samples shows two were made from human skin
@QuarterSwede@lemmy.world avatar

Waste not, want not.

cfi, to archaeology in New England stone walls deserve a science of their own

It’s crazy how I can be hiking in the middle of a dense forest or on top of a mountain and still stumble upon these walls.

jadero, to archaeology in New England stone walls deserve a science of their own

I used to get occasional work helping farm kids pick rocks. We don’t seem to have built any fences in Saskatchewan, preferring instead to just pile them up or bury them.

Never underestimate what happens when thousands of individual people do one thing over and over again, rock by rock, step by step, day in and day out, year after year. Whether it’s building fences, depleting resources, or putting waste into the environment, we always manage to more collectively than we can imagine as individuals.

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