Dr Eva F. Martellotta
@eva_martellotta
Techno-functional and traceological analysis of organic tools in Palaeolithic Europe and Aboriginal Australia 🇮🇹🇦🇺✈️
ID: 921342961367027713
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-2564-8060 20-10-2017 11:50:54
173 Tweet
436 Takipçi
532 Takip Edilen
Indigenous lessons for surviving the heat thesaturdaypaper.com.au/news/environme… via The Saturday Paper
Lots of fun yesterday during our #bonetools lab! Our amazing students learned how to manufacture and use bone #retouchers, a very common tool in the #Palaeolithic. …we even had some locals popping up to learn about #Archaeology! 🦎 😎 Australian Research Centre for Human Evolution
That's a wrap on T2 for GUAS! Thank you to everyone who came today and a massive thank you to Dr Dr Yinika Perston for taking the time to share her knowledge and insight with us 🤗 Good luck with your final assessments/exams and stay tuned for the fun activities we have planned in T3💀
I’m so proud of you guys!!! Griffith University Archaeological Society (GUAS)
What a great day visiting Sierra de Atapuerca and MuseoEvoluciónHumana in Burgos! Amazing sites and amazing people! HumEnDyLAB #TransCause
With Luc Doyon Art and symbolism in the Pleistocene, a brief update on the latest methodological advancements and new data doi.org/10.1016/B978-0… CNRS Écologie & Environnement Université de Bordeaux CNRS Aquitaine
Our research at the site – which was traditionally restricted to women – has also uncovered tools previously only associated with male crafters writes Irina Ponomarevas (Griffith University) and Jangga Elders Colin McLennan and Marie Wallace. theconversation.com/we-dated-a-sac…