💀 Chelsea Morgan 🌈 retweetledi
💀 Chelsea Morgan 🌈
3.8K posts

💀 Chelsea Morgan 🌈
@archaeocattus
Love bioarchaeology, books, games, & dumb jokes. Research interests: bone metabolism, disease, sex, gender & diet. She/her 🌈 pan. Views my own
Canberra Katılım Ocak 2015
1.6K Takip Edilen821 Takipçiler
💀 Chelsea Morgan 🌈 retweetledi

@MAGA_Maggot3 @Woman_Unruled @erewhonsmoothie A quick search and I found multiple articles saying the opposite? Took me 2 seconds
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Do you not remember the line “woman and children first” from the titular movie “Titanic”
Jeremy Wayne Tate@JeremyTate41
73% of all women from every class survived the sinking of the Titanic. Only 19% of men survived.
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💀 Chelsea Morgan 🌈 retweetledi

Idk how to say this eloquently but I’ll say it anyway:
Corporations are at the point where they know for a fact that we won’t fight back so they are increasingly comfortable offering us next to nothing and still charging us at a premium.
philip lewis@Phil_Lewis_
Southwest Airlines to end free checked bags policy for first time in its 54-year history cbsn.ws/4ij9tye
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💀 Chelsea Morgan 🌈 retweetledi
💀 Chelsea Morgan 🌈 retweetledi
💀 Chelsea Morgan 🌈 retweetledi

Artists have always loved to sketch!
Sketch of a sparrow from Egypt, c. 1479–1458 BC.
Some 3,500 years ago in Egypt, artists used flakes of limestone as sketch pads rather than paper.
MMA excavations 1922-23, Deir el-Bahri. 📷 The Met metmuseum.org/art/collection…
#FindsFriday
#Archaeology

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💀 Chelsea Morgan 🌈 retweetledi
💀 Chelsea Morgan 🌈 retweetledi
💀 Chelsea Morgan 🌈 retweetledi
We're delighted to have on loan to our #MedievalWomen exhibition a roll containing the testimony of London sex worker Eleanor Rykener.
In our latest blogpost, learn more about Eleanor's story, and how she was arrested exactly 630 years ago today.
blogs.bl.uk/digitisedmanus…

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@mayakern Cotton!! 💙
Belt 2”
Solo!
Sunflowers, hydrangeas, lilies, lotus, trees, maps, & blueprint!
If you offered this at knee length and wider shoulder straps, I’d get multiple. Maxi & spaghetti, I’d just get one. I overheat easily and spaghetti can trigger pain after a full day.
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💀 Chelsea Morgan 🌈 retweetledi

#Archaeological #drawing!
An essential part of the scientific documentation is the graphic interpretation of the objects. Over the last 10 years, we`ve developed a style that is aesthetic & at the same time as effective, allowing objects to be compared across regions. #ArchIllu

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💀 Chelsea Morgan 🌈 retweetledi
💀 Chelsea Morgan 🌈 retweetledi

THIS JUST IN - BABY HOMOTHERIUM MUMMY FOUND IN SIBERIA!
It was only a matter of time before we got the rest of the Pleistocene fauna of this region in mummy form. More material for de-extinction maybe
nature.com/articles/s4159…


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💀 Chelsea Morgan 🌈 retweetledi

This was, and still is, a great paper.
Sadly lead author Dr Jana Jones @Macquarie_Uni #Egyptology died last year after a long illness
She was rightly proud of this groundbreaking work, which pushed back dates for embalming to c 3700-3500 BC
#mummies #egypt #archaeology
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💀 Chelsea Morgan 🌈 retweetledi

In 2015, archaeologists made an extraordinary discovery in the Champagne region of France—a lavishly furnished tomb belonging to a Celtic prince dating back to the 5th Century BC. The exact identity of the prince remains unknown, as no inscriptions or written records were found to directly identify him. However, the wealth and grandeur of the burial suggest he held significant power and status.
This burial site, located in Lavau, held incredible artifacts that offered a rare glimpse into the wealth and power of the ancient Celtic elite. The prince was buried with a chariot, surrounded by treasures that included an intricately decorated bronze cauldron, Greek and Etruscan pottery, and a golden torc, one of the most iconic symbols of Celtic royalty. Among the remarkable finds was a unique 5-foot-wide bronze cauldron, adorned with the head of the Greek river god Achelous, featuring large, exaggerated horns. This cauldron, believed to have been imported from Greece or Etruria, likely served a ceremonial purpose for feasts or rituals involving the consumption of wine—a significant luxury among the Celts.
These artifacts suggest the Celts had far-reaching trade connections, even with Mediterranean cultures, highlighting their significance in early European history. The discovery of the tomb not only sheds light on the burial practices and craftsmanship of the time but also reinforces the Celtic tribes' sophisticated status during the Iron Age.
📸: Denis Gliksman/Inrap
#drthehistories

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