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Posts by Dr. Petra Creamer

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ASOR is offering Tigris Travel Grants covering the cost of travel and accommodation for the 2026 Annual Meeting in Chicago. Scholars must be citizens of Iraq and have an accepted paper on the Annual Meeting Academic Program. Learn more here: www.asor.org/fellowships/...

1 month ago 3 1 1 0
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Content Manager, Live Science - Future Publishing What you'll doOne of the world's leading, most trusted science brands, Live Science breaks down the stories behind the most interesting news and photos on the internet. Our team digs up fascinating di...

FYI - Live Science is hiring! Come work with me? (Remote, US based position)

4 months ago 20 18 1 1
THE STRATIGRAPHY OF URBAN DEVELOPMENT AT HAMOUKAR DURING THE EARLY BRONZE AGE: RESULTS FROM THE 2008–2010 SEASONS | IRAQ | Cambridge Core THE STRATIGRAPHY OF URBAN DEVELOPMENT AT HAMOUKAR DURING THE EARLY BRONZE AGE: RESULTS FROM THE 2008–2010 SEASONS

Another new Hamoukar publication! This time, on my excavation of Early Bronze levels at the site.

4 months ago 10 6 0 0
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The ASOR Program Committee seeks 4 new members to serve a 3-year term (2026–2028) with possibility of a 2nd term. We are interested in applications from members whose research area(s) are complementary to or not represented by current members of the PC. The brief app. is due Dec. 5: buff.ly/B16v7ds

5 months ago 3 2 0 0
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Cities are different animals: A zooarchaeology of urbanism at Hamoukar, Syria, 5th–3rd millennia BC The advent of urbanism marks a significant shift in human lifeways, and comparative study has shown that the world has seen many different forms of ur…

Hot off the presses - new article on the faunal remains from Hamoukar! Big thanks to co-authors Max Price, Diana Fennimore, Salam Al Kuntar, and Clemens Reichel for helping get this out into the world.

5 months ago 15 4 0 0
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New issue of American Journal of Archaeology Vol. 129, No. 4 (2025) www.journals.uchicago.edu/toc/aja/2025... @chicagojournals.bsky.social @petramcreamer.bsky.social @driesdaems.bsky.social @archaeological.org

7 months ago 5 4 0 0

💪

9 months ago 5 0 0 0

Summer is in full swing, but it’s not too early to think about your fall calendar. The Annual Meeting Program-at-a-Glance, as well as information about business meetings and special events, can be found on the 2025 ASOR Annual Meeting Schedules Page. Check it out here: buff.ly/nZBO4y4

9 months ago 1 1 0 0
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Archaeologists Unearth an Ancient Relief Depicting an Assyrian King and Rare Deities The artifact was found in Mosul, Iraq, buried in the ancient city of Nineveh

📰 Excavations at Nineveh, modern Iraq, uncover a relief depicting Assyrian king Ashurbanipal, surrounded by Mesopotamian deities 🏺

#ArchaeologyNews via ‪@smithsonianmag.bsky.social‬

www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/a...

11 months ago 22 9 2 0

Thanks, Christopher!!

11 months ago 1 0 0 0
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A HUGE thank-you to @bridgetalex.bsky.social, who took my overly-academic attempt at public writing and shuffled it along into something that belongs in front of a popular audience!

11 months ago 2 0 0 0

I wrote a piece for @sapiens-org.bsky.social! Teaching with unprovenanced artifacts is tricky at best, so I discuss how my experiences with the Carlos Museum and my work in Iraq meet somewhere in the middle.

11 months ago 9 2 1 0
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Back in the field and looking good! Stay tuned for updates on our 4th (wow!!) season at Qach Rresh, an Assyrian-Achaemenid admin site in Iraqi Kurdistan! 🏺 🪏 🤓

11 months ago 11 0 1 0

But the good news is, the mag cart's getting purchased for real!!! 🤩💜🥳

11 months ago 1 0 0 0

I'm glad I never knew about the nightmare that is Equipment Procurement Systems because I might've been scared off of being an archaeologist because of it 🫠 I was not built for this level of tracking down and filling out forms.

11 months ago 1 0 1 0
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Ever wonder how many lives have been saved by NIH-funded research - including your own? Enter any medical condition and instantly see how your tax dollars transformed science into survival.

www.ourhealthroi.com

1 year ago 422 325 27 35

Nice, can't wait to read!!

1 year ago 1 0 0 0
Darwin in the machine: addressing algorithmic individuation through evolutionary narratives in computing

Available through open access at AI & Society rdcu.be/eiqHf

#evolution #ai #artificiallife #evolutionarycomputing #computing #evolutionarytheory #blackmirror #academia #academicsky #aihype

1 year ago 5 3 1 0

An absolute embarrassment for Ohio, but no surprises there. I had an amazing education at Ohio State and this will effectively gut that and so many other institutions.

1 year ago 4 0 0 0
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2025 CALL FOR PAPERS—ASOR Annual Meeting - American Society of Overseas Research (ASOR) ASOR invites paper and workshop presentation proposals for the hybrid 2025 Annual Meeting, November 19-22. #ASOR25

Working on Syrian archaeology or cultural heritage? Submit an abstract for @asor-research.bsky.social's annual meeting in the Archaeology of Syria session! Abstracts due March 15. Papers can be virtual or in-person, and scholarships are available for registration fees.
www.asor.org/am/2025/call...

1 year ago 7 4 0 0

BlueSky, help me to spread the word!
--> Abstract submissions are now open for the ASOR Panel on "Pop Culture and Near Eastern Archaeology" for the 2025 Annual Meeting in Boston (hybrid) - November 19-22, 2025!
"The papers in this session represent a multidisciplinary discussion of approaches to

1 year ago 95 62 2 2

If Donald Trump can override our elected officials’ control of the purse strings, we are effectively entering a period of taxation without representation.

1 year ago 6251 1104 79 84

Exciting results hitting the presses about the Neolithic in Oman!! @archbot44.bsky.social and @pi-hisoka.bsky.social run a pretty awesome project 😎🏺

1 year ago 8 0 0 0

I'm around most of tomorrow if you want to grab a coffee! I gave myself a little buffer time to be able to see people :)

1 year ago 0 0 1 0
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I'm here at Harvard! Giving a talk today on Assyrian control and our results from excavating at Qach Rresh. Pop in if you're in Cambridge! 🏺😁

1 year ago 14 0 1 0
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Red wine, dog, and getting this dang (overdue) draft done. 🍷🖋️

1 year ago 9 0 1 0
Towards a Working Ancient Economy: The Bronze Age

Session Chairs: Eric Aupperle, Harvard University; Andrew Deloucas, Harvard University; Declan Maloneys, Harvard University; Taha Yurttas, Harvard University

Description: The first history we have is arguably an economic one: a record rooted in the practical concerns of administration, resource allocation, and labor management. The need to control and quantify goods was a driving force not only for accounting technology, but for the development of institutions. Written and material records of the Bronze Age provide unparalleled clarity in documenting chains of production and distribution networks. As such, the study of Bronze Age economic history offers a window into a past that can encompass all strata of society.

This member-organized session invites papers on ancient economy based on written, material, and visual sources in any imaginable combination. This includes examinations of traditional sources of economic information (written accounts, sealing hierarchies, spatial analyses) as well as wider discussions of the social, legal, and political context of economy. The session embraces a wide geographic area, welcoming papers from Greater Mesopotamia, Egypt, Anatolia and the Aegean, North Africa, the Caucasus, the Gulf, Central Asia, and beyond. Possible topics include trade networks, economic crises, labor history, debt, and civic institutions.

Towards a Working Ancient Economy: The Bronze Age Session Chairs: Eric Aupperle, Harvard University; Andrew Deloucas, Harvard University; Declan Maloneys, Harvard University; Taha Yurttas, Harvard University Description: The first history we have is arguably an economic one: a record rooted in the practical concerns of administration, resource allocation, and labor management. The need to control and quantify goods was a driving force not only for accounting technology, but for the development of institutions. Written and material records of the Bronze Age provide unparalleled clarity in documenting chains of production and distribution networks. As such, the study of Bronze Age economic history offers a window into a past that can encompass all strata of society. This member-organized session invites papers on ancient economy based on written, material, and visual sources in any imaginable combination. This includes examinations of traditional sources of economic information (written accounts, sealing hierarchies, spatial analyses) as well as wider discussions of the social, legal, and political context of economy. The session embraces a wide geographic area, welcoming papers from Greater Mesopotamia, Egypt, Anatolia and the Aegean, North Africa, the Caucasus, the Gulf, Central Asia, and beyond. Possible topics include trade networks, economic crises, labor history, debt, and civic institutions.

We have an @asor-research.bsky.social session!

"Towards a Working Ancient Economy: The Bronze Age"

Link here: www.asor.org/am/2025/appr...

1 year ago 16 1 2 0

Found out that TWENTY emails is considered a lot to politicians on an issue.

TWENTY.

As in, they call that getting slammed.

So next time you see a request to email your rep, or call, keep that in mind.

TWENTY is a lot.

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