Snuggle on down in your jimjams with a mug of your favorite warm beverage, as Anna tells Amber a bedtime story about a great moment in archaeological discovery. This week, we travel back to 17th century Sweden, where a professor named Olof Rudbeck changed the world with his research. No spoilers, so check out thedirtpod.com for this week's show notes and recommended reading.
Cache of the Day - Ep 57
This week, Anna and Amber take their inspiration from an archaeological news story and dive into some hidden treasures!
Links
Samuel Pepys’ 1666 diaries about his beloved parmesan [http://www.pepys.info/1666/1666sep.html] (Pepys.info)
Grave of 'real-life Asterix' who fought Caesar found amid trove of weapons and possessions in West Sussex [https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2019/07/22/real-life-asterix-fought-caesar-found-amid-trove-weapons-possessions/] (The Telegraph)
Archaeologists find richest cache of ancient mind-altering drugs in South America [https://www.sciencemag.org/news/2019/05/archaeologists-find-richest-cache-ancient-mind-altering-drugs-south-america] (Science)
Clovis-era Tool Cache 13,000 Years Old Shows Evidence Of Camel, Horse Butchering [https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2009/02/090225132355.htm] (Science Daily)
Under Maryland Street, Ties to African Past [https://www.nytimes.com/2008/10/21/science/21arch.html] (The New York Times)
A Cache of 18th-Century Rockets Discovered in India [https://www.archaeology-world.com/a-cache-of-18th-century-rockets-discovered-in-india/] (Archaeology World)
A Dog Named Monty Has Dug Up a Rare Cache of Bronze Age Artifacts in the Czech Republic [https://news.artnet.com/art-world/dog-archaeologist-czech-republic-1351412] (ArtNet)
Contacts
An Arctic Expedition - Ep54
Amber's too cold, Anna's too hot, and we've both lost our dang minds! In an effort to think about something other than the summer heat, this week we're offering you a sampler platter of some of the amazing archaeology from the Arctic regions up north! Learn how people got to the Arctic, what some of them did when they got there, and what's happening to Arctic sites now in light of global warming. Also hyenas. Refreshing!
Links
The Peopling of the Americas: Evidence for Multiple Models (Discover)
Late Pleistocene exploration and settlement of the Americas by modern humans (Science)
Beringia (National Parks Service)
These First Americans Vanished Without a Trace — But Hints of Them Linger (LiveScience)
The ancient people in the high-latitude Arctic had well-developed trade (EurekAlert)
Do Canadian Carvings Depict Vikings? Removing Mammal Fat May Tell (LiveScience)
How Did Prehistoric Hyenas Reach the Americas? Through the Arctic (Ha’aretz)
As the Arctic Erodes, Archaeologists Are Racing to Protect Ancient Treasures (Smithsonian)
The Unalaska Sea Ice Project (Boston University Zooarchaeology Laboratory)
What Clam Thermometers Tell Us About Past Climates (Sapiens)
Clamshells and Climate Change: What seal bones and clamshells teach us about past climate (The Brink)
The Dirt Book Club!
The earth is faster now: indigenous observations of Arctic environmental change, by Igor Krupnik and Dyanna Jolly
The last imaginary place: a human history of the Arctic world, by Robert McGhee