Nika Shilobod

21 Followers
27 Following
31 Posts
Geoarchaeologist in the Fediverse πŸ’šπŸ—ΊοΈ
Remember to stop and smell the #flowers today like this little meatball. 🌼🌻🌺🌹🌸🌷🏡️πŸͺ·πŸͺ» #dogs #dog
#caturday #dogs

The struggle of having two black meatballs is you can never get good pictures of them, especially when they're together. These two get SO jealous of each other, and the dog has a massive crush on the cat. It's hilarious.
Toothless Old Man 😻 February 2023
#Pevensey February 2023
This handsome devil. #cats
black #cats are the best. :)
Merry #Christmas from the batcat. #cats
First #microscopy post from my #Pollen reference collection, here we go...

Tender-handed, stroke a nettle,
And it stings you for your pains.
Grasp it like a man of mettle,
And it soft as silk remains.

This little guy is #Urtica diocia, better known as #StingingNettle.

It is found all over the world in mild and temperate climates and has a long history of use as a source of traditional medicine, food, tea, and textile raw materials.

In England, it was once thought that the Romans were the first to import the plant. Nettle fibre evidence from a cist on #Dartmoor, however, suggests that the plant was collected locally as far back as the #BronzeAge.

https://archaeology.co.uk/articles/features/cist-whitehorse-hill.htm

In #palaeoecology, it is used as a disturbance indicator, such as on sites of abandoned habitation/construction, within communities of cultivated ground, and on areas enriched with cattle and sheep dung.

Nettles are generally considered to be weeds due to their rapid growth but offer great benefits in rejuvenating over-fertilized soils and increasing local biodiversity.

Personally, I like it in a nice tea. It is surprisingly good. 🍡

Finally got my first microscope camera up. It's a bit fuzzy but it works. Hopefully, the one I am building will be better and then I can update it with better pics. #3dprint your own, here: https://openflexure.org/projects/microscope/

Original post: https://fediscience.org/@NikaShilobod/109395571843407560

Wiki upload: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Urtica_dioica_(Stinging_Nettle)_pollen.tif
The cist on Whitehorse Hill - Current Archaeology

Inside an Early Bronze Age burial Scores of prehistoric cists on Dartmoor were opened by antiquarian investigators in the 19th century. On occasion, their curiosity was rewarded with a flint tool or, if they were very lucky, a pot. More often than not their endeavours were met with an empty cavity. When an eroding cist exposed on Whitehorse Hill was excavated in 2011, it was assumed that the contents would be equally unremarkable. Instead, this exceptional burial is shining new light on Early Bronze Age Dartmoor, as Andy Jones told Matthew Symonds. Today, the Whitehorse Hill cist site could easily

Current Archaeology