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#SketchbookSunday: Archaeologists are essential to an excavation site for sure. Anthropologists, zoologists, botanists, and architects are needed too.
But it is the many local workmen doing the actual digging, who keep the whole thing running.
Here‘s to them. ✊
Another angle on #archaeology31‘s 'story time' of course would be the many little excavation anecdotes we have in our field journals.
Like that time a scorpion and I had a little ... misunderstanding about who was first in the excavation house‘s bathroom that one evening. 😬🤷🏻♂️
@MatthewPope @martinporr Heard rumors about some strange remains on a rather habitable planet in this solar system here too.
Plus some related stories about a spooky 'creature in the woods'. 🤔😉
Here‘s something special for #archaeology31‘s #FlintFriday - one of a couple of 'miniature #masks' from early Neolithic #GobekliTepe ... made from a #flint cortex in this case.
https://t.co/v3cQ2f69yc
100 seconds left.
The 2020 #DoomsdayClock statement by @BulletinAtomic is in (and it is worse, again):
https://t.co/4PQQuVsUme
For #archaeology31‘s day 21, '#experimental': short thread on visiting #Klokkesten, a #megalithic tomb on the #Danish island of #Lyø ... and some thoughts on #cupmarks (and #acoustics).
Maybe the real features were the friends we made along the way? 🤔😲😉
Today‘s 12th #archaeology31 topic is: #friendship.
It finally occured to me during this Sunday‘s breakfast ...
Mysterious #GobekliTepe #iconography decoded? 😲😜😉
#Australia by the way is still #burning.
A contintent. On fire. https://t.co/2MGbjQDzow