Simon

@simoncarrignon
134 Followers
400 Following
402 Posts
Ah oui travailler dans les ISP englais c'est dur!! pas de chauffage + port du casque obligatoire a cause des risques de chuttes de morceau de toit j'imagine?
Second day at #CES2024Durham , after a night slightly disturbed by the lovely sound of a fire alarm, we are back at it! And big shout out for the lightning talks speakers who keep delivering awesome content regardless or the harsh constraints of the format and the technical challenges!
If you are around Cambridge next week don't forget to come by! we're hosting a super nice symposium to discuss and compare the arrival of farming in Japan & the British Islands (and you can also register online: https://cam-ac-uk.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZUodeGvqD0sGNFtPYGYO6MKcTKqi7Dx_RzW). This is also the occasion to wrap up what have been done within the ENCOUNTER project, for which I've been working on for the last 3 years. #japan #farming #archaeodon #histodon #neolithization #paddyfields #cambridge #britain #gb #jp #symposium
Welcome! You are invited to join a meeting: The Transition to Agriculture at the edges of Eurasia. After registering, you will receive a confirmation email about joining the meeting.

This two-day symposium will present the latest advances on the transition to farming in the British Isles and the Japanese archipelago as well as the key outputs of the ENCOUNTER project. A total of 19 speakers will discuss different aspects of this pivotal event, covering aspects such as population genetics, cultural transmission, paleoecology, subsistence economy and paleodemography. The event will be both in person and online. For more information visit https://www.encounterproject.info/announcements

Zoom
comme une sensation de noël qui approche

The series was also the occasion to showcase organic products from French, UK & Spanish small producers.

To extend the reflection about social learning and cultural transmission developed by our speakers, we set up a website that allows everyone to explore & understand the journey and cause links that brought each product to you. The website is here : https://theia.arch.cam.ac.uk/garrod/?city=mcdo&utm_source=twitter and the code to generate it is open source: https://gitlab.developers.cam.ac.uk/archaeology/cdal/AppGarrod2023/

#freesoftware #food #sociallearning

Empirical Network of Cultural Transmission

That's it, That's done! The Garrod Seminar Series is finished for this term!

We want to warmly thank all the speakers: @fionajordan , Mike O'Brien, Felix Riede
, @amesoudi , Stephen Shennan, Ruth Mace
& Valentine Roux. An amazing series, lot of discussion, debates and food for thoughts #CulturalEvolution #Archaeology #CambridgeArchaeology

Hello #archeodon & #cultevodon !!
Last post about the #Cambridge #Garrod #Seminar! Thursday 4pm UK time, Valentine Roux from the CNRS will guide us for our last walk into the exploration of the integration between Evolutionary Theories, Cultural Transmission and Archaeology!
Come in person or register online here: https://zoom.us/meeting/register/tJMvde-vpzMqEt08wPbesoHF-HnSdu5yXAgn#/registration
Full Abstract: https://www.arch.cam.ac.uk/events/garrod-research-seminars/thinking-evolutionary-laws-technological-trajectories-and
#technology #evolution #potery
Welcome! You are invited to join a meeting: Garrod Seminar. After registering, you will receive a confirmation email about joining the meeting.

The Garrod Research Seminar Series is the Department of Archaeology’s principal seminar series of invited scholarly lectures. All are welcome and encouraged to attend. In Michaelmas Term 2023, the theme for the Garrod seminar series is ‘Cultural Evolution & Archaeology’.

Zoom

Packed week but worth it! After Stephen Shennan's Talk yesterday, join us on Monday to listen to Ruth Mace! Online or at the Henry Welcome Building in #Cambridge it's going to be great and your penultimate chance to assist the #CulturalEvolution & #Archaeology series!

🗓️Mon 27th November

🕓4pm UK time
more: https://www.arch.cam.ac.uk/events/garrod-research-seminars

Garrod Research Seminars | Department of Archaeology

The Garrod Research Seminar Series is the Department of Archaeology’s principal seminar series of invited scholarly lectures. All are welcome and encouraged to attend. Cultural Evolution & Archaeology In order to understand the past, archaeology has always been concerned with how culture arises, how it is defined and how it changes through time. Several theoretical and

And here the weekly post about our #Garrod seminar series! I am super happy and happy to remind you Alex Mesoudi from #Exeter will give his talk '#Archaeology within a unified science of cultural evolution'
at the department of #Archaeology, #Cambridge .
Don't miss it:
🗓 Thursday, 4pm UK time
Full Abstract: https://www.arch.cam.ac.uk/events/garrod-research-seminars/operationalising-archaeological-taxonomies-using-cultural
Online registration: https://zoom.us/meeting/register/tJMvde-vpzMqEt08wPbesoHF-HnSdu5yXAgn#/registration
#CulturalEvolution
Operationalising archaeological taxonomies using cultural evolutionary approaches – and why it matters | Department of Archaeology

Like it or not, classification is a key component of archaeological research. For most archaeologists working with artefacts, typology is unquestionably the means by which such classification is conducted. Typology, however, is critically flawed epistemologically, although it ironically often works in practice.

Don't forget to join us for the seminar 'Operationalising archaeological #taxonomies using cultural evolutionary approaches – and why it matters' 🌟 with Felix Riede from #Aarhus in our #Garrod Seminar Series at the department of #Archaeology, #Cambridge .
🗓 Thursday, 4pm UK time
Full Abstract: https://www.arch.cam.ac.uk/events/garrod-research-seminars/operationalising-archaeological-taxonomies-using-cultural
Online registration: https://zoom.us/meeting/register/tJMvde-vpzMqEt08wPbesoHF-HnSdu5yXAgn#/registration
#CulturalEvolution
Operationalising archaeological taxonomies using cultural evolutionary approaches – and why it matters | Department of Archaeology

Like it or not, classification is a key component of archaeological research. For most archaeologists working with artefacts, typology is unquestionably the means by which such classification is conducted. Typology, however, is critically flawed epistemologically, although it ironically often works in practice.