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Ancient Iberian Slate Plaques: Early Genealogical Records?

Anthropology.net

A recent study, published in the European Journal of Archaeology 1 , suggests these plaques may represent one of humanity's earliest attempts at recording genealogy—a non-verbal precursor to modern ancestry documentation. Journal : European Journal of Archaeology , 2004. Journal : Cambridge Archaeological Journal , 2009.

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Application of Archaeological Anthropology and Cultural Resources Management

Anthropology for Beginners

Application of Archaeology Archaeology is the study of human past through material remains. Archaeology, then, is both a physical activity out in the field, and an intellectual pursuit in the study or laboratory. Here the methods of archaeology and ethnography overlap. How were those pots used?

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Butchered Remains at Bronze Age Charterhouse Warren Reveal Prehistoric Atrocity

Anthropology.net

While cannibalism has been documented in prehistoric contexts—such as at nearby Gough’s Cave in Cheddar Gorge, where Paleolithic humans likely consumed their dead as part of ritual practices—the events at Charterhouse Warren appear to be different. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology , 45, 94–108.

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A Red Smile from the Silk Road: The Mystery of Cinnabar-Stained Teeth in Ancient Turpan

Anthropology.net

Credit: Archaeological and Anthropological Sciences (2025). The burial, discovered in the Shengjindian Cemetery and dated to between 202 BCE and 8 CE, is the first documented case of cinnabar-stained teeth in the archaeological record. Multi-angle views of the stained teeth of 07TSM11:B.

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A Call for Respect: Rethinking How Museums Care for Animal Remains

Anthropology.net

In a new paper published in Advances in Archaeological Practice 1 , Ward and his colleagues are calling for museums to take a more ethical, culturally informed approach to caring for the bones of animals, particularly those tied to Indigenous traditions. Are they places where we treat archaeological objects as inanimate things?

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Unraveling a “Ghost” Neanderthal Lineage

Sapiens

Archaeological excavations at Mandrin Cave revealed the remains of both Neanderthals and modern humans. This Herculean field effort allowed the recovery of the tiniest remains, which were carefully documented in their original positions. Fittingly, the Thorin of the Mandrin Cave is believed to be one of the last Neanderthals.

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Learning From Snapshots of Lost Fossils

Sapiens

Ksâr ‘Akil 4 remained unknown to researchers until 2019 when we—an archaeologist and a biological anthropologist—found a photograph of those teeth within towers of carboard boxes of documents from the Ksâr ‘Akil excavations. But first, he decided to inspect the notes, papers, letters, and photographs that documented the site.