Flyers
Posts by Rachel Singer
Flyers
Four microscopic images of pollen.
It's #PlantAppreciationDay, so we want to show some love for the uses of plants in #archaeology! 🏺
Preserved plant remains can teach us a lot about life in the past, and we explore a few examples in this mini #AntiquityThread 1/7 🧵
Baserunning this bad on the Phanatic’s birthday is just mean
Nevermind, they are back
Who are these competent batters, and what have they done with my Phillies?
Hooray, congrats!
History without historians is doomed to fail. With an interdisciplinary team of scholars we show how the purported link between late Roman conflicts and drought has been misunderstood. We also outline a path forward in the use of sources in paleoclimatic research.
link.springer.com/article/10.1...
RIP
Do you want to..?
Image source: Jiří Vnouček, "The Parchment of the Codex Amiatinus in the Context of Manuscript Production in Northumbria Around the End of the Seventh Century," Journal of Paper Conservation 20 (2019): fig. 13
Medieval manuscript with a number of white spot blemishes on the right-hand side. Image source, Jiří Vnouček, "The Parchment of the Codex Amiatinus in the Context of Manuscript Production in Northumbria Around the End of the Seventh Century," Journal of Paper Conservation 20 (2019): fig. 13
A question for my #medievalsky manuscript friends: has anyone ever come across a manuscript with white spots on it, as in the image below? Or any other MS that seemed diseased? I'm particularly interested in early medieval British and Irish instances, but I'd love to hear about anything you've got!
If it helps, even I am finding it difficult to convince my undergrads that I’m young and hip
Badly drawn, grainy, blue and gold award ribbon labeled “fell for it again award”
Philly sports and I are on a break
Graphical abstract for the paper. Skeletons with male & female grave goods (sword and brooches with bead string), with arrows to a tooth showing the type of analyses & subsequent information you can get from them. First arrow goes to isotopes which tell about individual migration; strontium is linked to food and underlying soils/geology; oxygen is linked to drinking water and to the climate. The second arrow goes to DNA which informs about ancestry and relatedness. To the right is a map of Europe, Western Asia and Northern Africa with a big oval of arrows to indicate movement around all areas of the map, and a map pin in England with arrows from various regions leading to it, to show that people moved from all across the map into England in the early medieval period.
🌟New Year exciting new OA paper🌟 doi.org/10.1080/0076... from myself @hcaatedinburgh.bsky.social, @shakenbeck.bsky.social & TC O'Connell @cam-archaeology.bsky.social "Large-Scale Isotopic Data Reveal Gendered Migration into Early Medieval England c ad 400–1100" using #isotopes & #aDNA🧵⬇️ 1/
Thanks! They were handing them out for free at the tailgate!
Woman in eagles gear holding giant Philadelphia cream cheese
Woman wearing eagles gear and giant Philadelphia cream cheese hat
Lambeau Field lit up
Eagles vs Packers game still
Go birds 🦅🏈
Confused looking woman stands in field holding book
It’s the flattest place I’ve ever been - here I am at Edix “Hill” in 2022 feeling betrayed by the name! The book I’m holding is the excavation report, because I could not believe that what I was looking at was the “hill” in question without triple-checking the map.
Oh, thank you! That’s very kind!
Thanks, James!
FWIW, I’m the first to admit I was probably wrong about the date, lol :)
Badly drawn, grainy, blue and gold award ribbon labeled “fell for it again award”
Philly sports and I are on a break
Yes, and?
Go birds 🦅🏈
An article I wrote about emotions and colonialism has just come out in The Sixteenth Century Journal - you can find it below or message me if you’d like a PDF!
The Sixteenth Century Journal: Vol 56, No 2 www.journals.uchicago.edu/doi/10.1086/...
Can’t wait to read it!
Pangur Bán and his owner might disagree, lol
Louse-borne relapsing fever is an important part of early British infectious disease history since William MacArthur’s 1949 speculation that it caused the mysterious, sixth-century outbreaks often assumed to be plague. It’s therefore Enormously exciting to have new paleoscientific evidence of it!
Want to learn how a careful study of burial #archaeology can improve our understanding of past disease events, especially the First #Plague #Pandemic (6th-8th centuries)? Check the #OpenAccess article I led in this month’s issue of Speculum: A Journal of Medieval Studies!
lol, does it still count as East Coast bias if there’s only a 12-hour difference?
Photo of physical copy of “Burial Archaeology and the First Plague Pandemic” article
It exists in the physical world!
@merleeisenberg.bsky.social