archaeobotanist.blogspot.com
The Archaeobotanist: Origins of Rice Podcasts
http://archaeobotanist.blogspot.com/2013/11/origins-of-rice-podcasts.html
A quick tally of new publications in archaeobotany, often with some first impressions. Also some assessments of recent conferences, web-sites or other sources. Opinions and views on the evolution and history of crops. Thursday, 14 November 2013. Origins of Rice Podcasts. Last week, before typhoon tragedies hit the Philippines, I joined about 700 geneticists and plant breeders working on rice for the Rice Genetics 7 symposium. For the extended 14-minute version on archaeobotany try this link. The place to...
archaeobotanist.blogspot.com
The Archaeobotanist: November 2013
http://archaeobotanist.blogspot.com/2013_11_01_archive.html
A quick tally of new publications in archaeobotany, often with some first impressions. Also some assessments of recent conferences, web-sites or other sources. Opinions and views on the evolution and history of crops. Thursday, 14 November 2013. Origins of Rice Podcasts. Last week, before typhoon tragedies hit the Philippines, I joined about 700 geneticists and plant breeders working on rice for the Rice Genetics 7 symposium. For the extended 14-minute version on archaeobotany try this link. The place to...
jeremycollins.org
All Categories - Jeremy Collins. org
http://www.jeremycollins.org/blog/category/all
Jeremy Collins. org. Workshop in Jena on Austronesian linguistics, archeology and genetics. Here is my brief and perhaps slightly garbled summary of the talks. Michiko Intoh talked about Fais island, a raised coral island (pictured) where arrivals of people several hundred years apart were documented by objects they left behind (such as in evolving styles of fish hook and pottery), engagingly illustrated by a slide showing overlapping layers of different remains in one site. These talks ranged from quest...
archaeobotanist.blogspot.com
The Archaeobotanist: Obscure crops of 2011 and an obscure book
http://archaeobotanist.blogspot.com/2012/01/obscure-crops-of-2011-and-obscure-book.html
A quick tally of new publications in archaeobotany, often with some first impressions. Also some assessments of recent conferences, web-sites or other sources. Opinions and views on the evolution and history of crops. Wednesday, 11 January 2012. Obscure crops of 2011 and an obscure book. I am ever the fan of the obscure crop, the "lost crop", or the highly local. I have drawn attention previously to the forgotten oil-millet of Taiwan. 2 Argan ( Argania spinosa. Archaeological record from Southern Morocco...
archaeobotanist.blogspot.com
The Archaeobotanist: July 2013
http://archaeobotanist.blogspot.com/2013_07_01_archive.html
A quick tally of new publications in archaeobotany, often with some first impressions. Also some assessments of recent conferences, web-sites or other sources. Opinions and views on the evolution and history of crops. Monday, 15 July 2013. The eastern fertile crescent returns. The recent paper in Science by Riehl et al. on the evidence for Chogah Golan. Has rightly garnerd wide attention (e.g. Science news. What this what we/ I suspected? Were things really synchronous? On the whole, however, these new d...
sites.google.com
ashmound
https://sites.google.com/site/ashmound
The Ashmounds of South India. A photo gallery of the Neolithic of South India. Info: The Deccan Prehistory Project (formerly Bellary District Archaeological Project). Scholars and Research Links. For cultivation, however, dates from ca. 2200 BC, while probably domestcated cattle, sheep and goats date to before 2600 BC. The Neolithic continued until 1200-1000 BC when Iron objects first appear and the periods is known as the Megalithic. Sites in the photo gallery:. Updated 6.7.2010]. University College Lon...
homepages.ucl.ac.uk
Home
http://www.homepages.ucl.ac.uk/~tcrndfu/web_project/home.html
South Deccan Prehistory Project. Protection of Sites and Monuments. Origins of Agriculture in South India. Bellary District Archaeological Project. Ashmounds of South India. Photo gallery and gazetteer). The South Deccan Prehistory Project. Ravi Korisettar , and Michael Petraglia. The project is focused on investigating, recording and interpreting the prehistoric remains, especially Neolithic and Iron Age, of the south Deccan plateau. Currently we are in a post-excavation phases of analysis and writi...
archaeobotanist.blogspot.com
The Archaeobotanist: Olduvai plant fossils taphonomy
http://archaeobotanist.blogspot.com/2011/12/olduvai-plant-fossils-taphonomy.html
A quick tally of new publications in archaeobotany, often with some first impressions. Also some assessments of recent conferences, web-sites or other sources. Opinions and views on the evolution and history of crops. Friday, 30 December 2011. Olduvai plant fossils taphonomy. Etc) lived published on-line for. Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom). Rice spikelet base, wild barley rachis. Archaeobotany and Domestication Scoop.it. Rice origins and cultural history Scoop.it. The arrival of wheat in China. Labor...
archaeobotanist.blogspot.com
The Archaeobotanist: The arrival of wheat in China
http://archaeobotanist.blogspot.com/2010/07/arrival-of-wheat-in-china.html
A quick tally of new publications in archaeobotany, often with some first impressions. Also some assessments of recent conferences, web-sites or other sources. Opinions and views on the evolution and history of crops. Friday, 9 July 2010. The arrival of wheat in China. I have also argued that japonica rice followed this route west from the Yellow river and in India (see discussion in my article in the recent rice issue of Archaeological and Anthropoloigical Sciences. Rice cannot be seen in isolation....