Plain text version: https://fpannorthcentral.blogspot.com/2021/03/the-trowel-tribune-march-25-2021-plain.html
The Florida Public Archaeology Network (FPAN) works to promote and facilitate the conservation, study, and public understanding of Florida's archaeological heritage through regional centers located throughout the state.
Thursday, March 25, 2021
The Trowel Tribune - March 25, 2021 (Plain Text)
The Trowel Tribune
Archaeology never stops happening!
Tuesday, March 23, 2021
Archaeology's Super Power: Telling Untold Stories and, Let's Face It, Making History More Intriguing!
Artistic rendering of what the Birka female Viking warrior may have looked like, by Tancredi Valeri. (image from Smithsonian Magazine). |
Thursday, March 18, 2021
The Trowel Tribune - March 17, 2021 (Plain Text)
The Trowel Tribune
Archaeology never stops happening!
Archaeology Reveals Hidden Mayan Tale
A combination of Mayan records and archaeological remains tell a complicated story.
One of archaeology’s greatest strengths is in it’s ability to tell the untold stories. In the case of a member of the Mayan elite we learn that his life was a lot more nuanced than the records might suggest.
Ajpach’ Waal was born into a privileged family and inherited a role as an important diplomat from his father. Unfortunately for him, an alliance he brokered ultimately failed. The records in, combination with the platform near the temple he was buried in, tells a story of a high-status individual.
His remains tell a very different story though. There are signs of his wealth in teeth drilled to inlay pyrite or jade and some flattening to his skull. However, there are indications of malnutrition when he was a child, his arm bones also bear the signs of trauma or disease and by the end of his life he had also developed arthritis in many of his joints and lost many of his teeth.
He even lost one of his tooth inlays late in life due to plaque build up which was never replaced. This suggests something of a fall from grace as it’s absence would have been very obvious.
Continued on page 17
Computer Conundrum Calculates Cosmos
Greek calculator fully modeled for the first time!
Researchers have managed to fully model the Antikythera Contraption, a Greek device designed to calculate the stars to aid in navigation. This device was discovered by a diver in 1900 and has remained a mystery ever since.
For over a century though, damage and corrosion prevented researchers from fully...
Continued on page 5
Popular Archaeology Show Returns from the Grave
British television show Time Team returns to YouTube for a new excavation of a Roman villa in Oxfordshire. The popular show ran for 20 years, but was canceled in 2014.
The Time Team series is typically well thought of by archaeologists as one of the few good depictions of archaeology in popular media. The return is thanks to a successful Patreon campaign...
Continued on page 11
Friday, March 12, 2021
Florida Archaeology Month Recommended Reading: Grit-Tempered
(photo courtesy of Amazon Books) |
Hester Davis (Photo courtesy of The Archaeological Conservancy) |
Thursday, March 11, 2021
The Trowel Tribune - March 11, 2021 (plain text)
The Trowel Tribune
Archaeology never stops happening!
Wednesday, March 3, 2021
Florida Archaeology Month 2021 Celebrates Community-Based Archaeology
Every March Florida celebrates Florida Archaeology Month. It is a time to celebrate our unique and long cultural history and reflect on the management and preservation of our cultural resources. Each year has a unique theme and this year we will be focusing on community based archaeology. So what is community-based archaeology? Community archaeology strives to involve communities in the planning and implementation of archaeology research projects. Communities come in many different forms and sizes, but they all have a history and heritage that is unique to them. Community-Based Archaeology takes community archaeology a step further. This approach promotes using archaeology as a tool that encourages communities to create knowledge that is relevant, empowering, and of use to them. In order to be part of such an approach, archaeologists must choose to seek out, earn trust with, support, and collaborate with the communities who are connected to places they wish to study. It requires a commitment to equitable partnerships and honoring the integrity of diverse voices, systems of knowledge, and forms of data.