- Видео 28
- Просмотров 20 626
Mesolithic Deeside Lockdown Channel
Добавлен 28 апр 2020
Mesolithic Deeside is a group of archaeologists, students and local volunteers investigating the river Dee area 10,000 years ago. The river Dee is in Aberdeenshire in NE Scotland.
During lockdown we are learning new digital and online skills which we hope to develop to include people from all over the world in our project.
During lockdown we are learning new digital and online skills which we hope to develop to include people from all over the world in our project.
Видео
Mapping Mesolithic Motorways: Sandra Davison
Просмотров 53911 месяцев назад
Mesolithic Deeside volunteer Sandra Davison presented a talk on her work Mapping Mesolithic Motorways which began in 2023 by mapping drove roads and existing find spots. Lithics found in the Cairngorm Mountain passes indicate Mesolithic people at least occasionally moved through montane areas. Was this social or economic movement, for exploration, or migration? Can we find more lithics to help ...
Treasure Trove in Scotland
Просмотров 3783 года назад
Sophie Flynn is a member of the Treasure Trove Unit (TTU) in Scotland and she is an expert in Palaeolithic Archaeology and Palaeoanthropology. She has written this talk especially for members of Mesolithic Deeside explaining what the TTU do and how the lithics that we find fit into this system.
Invisible Traces: tool use and microwear. Jess Bates, University of York
Просмотров 5024 года назад
Jess discusses a striped Mesolithic blade, found by Mesolithic Deeside volunteers, which is similar to one from Star Carr and talks about her fascinating research in microwear.
The Hill of Assembly. June Armstrong, Roslyn Hay and Carol Reid
Просмотров 2204 года назад
Mesolithic Deeside members June Armstrong, Roslyn Hay and Carol Reid talk about their field at Findrack - they discovered the lithic scatter, received permission to walk, collected lithics, got them mapped, a report by Ann Clarke. This is a fascinating piece of work - watch the talk and hear about what they found.
Zooming in: the stories behind some individual lithic finds along the river Dee
Просмотров 3604 года назад
Ann Clarke, lithics specialist talks about some of the wonderful finds recovered by Mesolithic Deeside along the river Dee. This was presented to the AGM on 22 October 2020
Finding the Mesolithic in the Cairngorms: Graeme Warren
Просмотров 1,8 тыс.4 года назад
Professor Graeme Warren of University College Dublin discusses Mesolithic sites in the Cairngorms and takes questions live from a large knowledgeable audience
How pictures were taken
Просмотров 1064 года назад
Mesolithic Deeside volunteer Chris Bell has prepared this powerpoint presentation showing how to take good quality photographs of the flints. NOTE: there is no sound
Moira Blackmore examples of 3D lithics photography
Просмотров 904 года назад
Moira Blackmore examples of 3D lithics photography
3D photography explained by Moira Blackmore
Просмотров 1064 года назад
How to set up a 3D photograph, what you need, how long it takes and see some of the fantastic results that she gets
Why are there so few Mesolithic human remains in Scotland? Chantal Conneller
Просмотров 9414 года назад
I talked to Chantal Conneller and asked her 'Why are there so few Mesolithic human remains in Scotland?' This is her reply! Here she details Mesolithic burial remains, why there are so few in certain areas of the country (eg Scotland) and discusses where we might start to look for them. Chantal is a lecturer in the Upper Palaeolithic and Mesolithic archaeology at Newcastle University. Her backg...
Lost Lochs on Deeside and why Mesolithic Deeside might be interested: Michael Stratigos
Просмотров 6354 года назад
Michael is an archaeologist interested in wetland and underwater archaeology. He is presently based at the Scottish Universities Environmental Research Centre as Post-doctoral Research Assistant investigating Iron Age crannogs in Loch Tay.
Nettle Cordage; Elaine Lindsay
Просмотров 2 тыс.4 года назад
Elaine Lindsay is a straw worker and runs Something Corny. She has been volunteering with Mesolithic Deeside for 4 years and has demonstrated nettle rope making at several events with us. Here she shows you how to harvest the nettles (and not get stung), prepare the nettles and make the rope.
A Scottish Archaeologist on the Silk Road: Caroline Wickham-Jones
Просмотров 2404 года назад
Caroline Wickham-Jones travels back in time and space to take you with her on a journey she made from Pakistan to China and on to Mongolia in 1988. Crossing the Himalayas on the Karakorum Highway and then along the Silk Road she visited some of the major heritage sites along the route and her journey documented a world that has since changed much.
Wild Things
Просмотров 1654 года назад
Mesolithic Deeside volunteers chat about the plants we know (from excavations and pollen cores) were growing around the river Dee in the Mesolithic and what they may have used them for.
World Heritage Sites: Caroline Wickham-Jones
Просмотров 1634 года назад
World Heritage Sites: Caroline Wickham-Jones
Woodlands Under the Waves: Dr Scott Timpany
Просмотров 5454 года назад
Woodlands Under the Waves: Dr Scott Timpany
Moira Blackmore 3D lithics photography
Просмотров 794 года назад
Moira Blackmore 3D lithics photography
Hidden Landscapes: archaeology below the waves by Caroline Wickham-Jones
Просмотров 5544 года назад
Hidden Landscapes: archaeology below the waves by Caroline Wickham-Jones
After the Ice: the first settlers of Scotland by Caroline Wickham-Jones
Просмотров 1,3 тыс.4 года назад
After the Ice: the first settlers of Scotland by Caroline Wickham-Jones
Kirsty Dingwall: Mesolithic Milltimber
Просмотров 3954 года назад
Kirsty Dingwall: Mesolithic Milltimber
Scotland's Earliest Ceremonial Monument? by Shannon Fraser
Просмотров 4204 года назад
Scotland's Earliest Ceremonial Monument? by Shannon Fraser
A Chat with Jan Dunbar archaeological illustrator
Просмотров 2314 года назад
A Chat with Jan Dunbar archaeological illustrator
The Anatomy of a Lithic Scatter: Caroline Wickham-Jones
Просмотров 1,3 тыс.4 года назад
The Anatomy of a Lithic Scatter: Caroline Wickham-Jones
Living in the Mesolithic by Caroline Wickham-Jones
Просмотров 7 тыс.4 года назад
Living in the Mesolithic by Caroline Wickham-Jones
Mesolithic Deeside fashions and flints: volunteers talk about their involvement in the project
Просмотров 1414 года назад
Mesolithic Deeside fashions and flints: volunteers talk about their involvement in the project
Mapping Mesolithic Deeside by Irvine Ross
Просмотров 2454 года назад
Mapping Mesolithic Deeside by Irvine Ross
When the Ice Goes, the River Flows: an introduction to the Mesolithic Deeside project
Просмотров 4294 года назад
When the Ice Goes, the River Flows: an introduction to the Mesolithic Deeside project
Great presentation
Incredible presentation. Thank you!
I am so shocked and sad to know Dr. Wickham-Jones has passed away in January 2022. This video is her everlasting memory. R.I.P.
Interesting and well illustrated, thanks!
Thank you very much for making this video. My brother and I recently had genetic testing done and it said our paternal line is directly descended from the Mesolithic WHG population in what is now Ireland and the Scottish Highlands. I've been trying to gather as much information about these people and their way of life as I can, and this video was very informative. Feel like I'm listening to a family history.
This is such a great series of videos. Thanks for publishing them. I’m particularly interested in the comments on the salmon fishing (I think mentioned in the first video) which seemed to suggest it was proven, as opposed to being suggested. Can anyone tell me if salmonid bones were found at Crathes or Nethermills?
Excellent tutorial 👍
So happy i found your channel. All of my favorite things! Scotland, crafts, and archaeology
Sophie i have loads of things ive dug up at work
So the arrowheads i find at a dig site on private land in Scotland are treasure trove ? Hmmm i think I will keep my barbed and tanged /leaf points and my mesolithic jasper blade core all to myself
Cool. I'll be back
Cool thanks.
Very interesting talk!
Love your enthusiasm!
Imagine a place so bad they people go to Scotland to escape....
Fabulous talk, thank you so much
This was wonderful, a hugely interesting, informative and exciting presentation, thank you, so much to ponder.
It is a shame that two to three sentences out of a forty minute lecture are generating the responses here. The past is inherently political, especially the story of the movement of different groups of people into the British and Irish Isles at different times. For example, the original publication of the Cheddar Man genome led to online commentary arguing that he had been killed by the original white settlers of England because he was an immigrant. Using moments like this lecture to raise awareness of the potential politics of the past is part of my job. It was not meant to be 'patronising'. Not knowing the background of the audience and lecturing without being able to read the reactions of a live audience makes it difficult to pitch things sometimes. If I misjudged the tone on this occasion that is a shame: I had enjoyed the lecture and the chance to engage with people. I'll make no comment on 'humility' when it is others who are making public accusations about my work and character.
First of all great lecture, and as a graduate student, I want to thank Professors like you for being an inspiration to younger generations of aspiring academics, especially in the biological and behavioral sciences. Secondly, I can understand and appreciate your desire to help inform the public, and also to fight against xenophobia, but I think the reaction of some of the commenters is understandable. Not due to the nature of your comments - again I genuinely appreciated the lecture and your desire to inform the public about xenophobia - but rather because of our political climate. The media is overwhelmingly pro-migration and very "woke" these days, so almost everyone is familiar with these talking points. Certainly any educated audience, or any audience that is generally interested in scientific, philosophical, or other academic topics. I am a leftist, and a biracial American, and leftists often emphasize the importance of allowing non-European and indigenous peoples to maintain their culture, their traditions, their ethnic identity, and political control over their historical & national homelands. Leftists will praise Islamic, African, Native American, etc. cultures and praise efforts to preserve their heritage and identity, but they do not apply the same standards to Europeans cultures. If Europeans want to maintain their identity, and their heritage, and control over their borders and political institutions, this is seen as racist, and in most contexts these people would even be labeled "white nationalists" in the current political climate. It seems like a double standard that it is important for Arab or Hispanics to maintain their culture, but for some reason European culture is too racist or too white or too oppressive. This seems like a position rooted in emotion and ideology, rather than reason and moral principles. Or to present another angle on the matter: hundreds of years ago, many Europeans fled from regions like the UK, Ireland, and the Low Countries to move to America because they were facing violence, persecution, disease, hunger, and religious intolerance. Literally hundreds of thousands of people were dying throughout Europe. There were wars. Famine. Religious persecution, and in some areas even serfdom (although I suppose mostly in the east). Anyway, anyone familiar with the historical records know that it is a matter of objective fact that most settlers in the US were working class and impoverished individuals, often from oppressed religious groups. Furthermore, the vast majority of these people were not engaging in outright war, or conquering Native American villages (or South African, Australian, etc.) Most of them weren't conquerors or rapists or slavers. They were normal people, looking to settle peacefully, and build a new life. Yes many terrible things happened, but in most cases people were just immigrating from Europe to North America, and settling peacefully and living normal lives. They weren't killing or raping or enslaving. They were literally refugees who were fleeing war and poverty, and generally settling peacefully, and living an agrarian existence. Today we don't call these people refugees or migrants. We call it colonialism, and we say that these people were racist and evil, and all Europeans and white people today are guilty for this episode of history. But at the same time leftists extol the values of multiculturalism and "diversity" and mass immigration into the west. In fact, leftists will even use hyperbolic language, and describe these people as "brave", "heroes", etc. I'm actually not entirely opposed to immigration. I think people should be able to live where they want, but I just think it's a ridiculous double standard and completely inconsistent narrative. If migration is good, then migration is good when Europeans move to Africa and when Africans move to Europe. If migration is bad, then similarly, it is bad when Europeans migrate to Africa, and it is bad when African's migrate to Europe.
Very interesting and in-depth analysis of Mesolithic human activity in Upper Deeside ; BUT spoilt by the political lecture about the influx of illegal aliens coming over the English Channel!
@RNM45 I use the legal term rightly; 'illegal alien'- a term used to describe those persons that have no right of abode in the United Kingdom!
Very interesting! Thank you! Very helpful in my late- in -life studies of my British Isles Mesolithic ancestry.
Interesting introduction to producing 3D images of flint; leading on to producing a model to upload to Sketchfab.
Thank you. Very interesting.
A really interesting talk - many thanks !
Plant names can be confusing. The plant commonly called bilberry in some identification books (Vaccinium myrtillus) is known in this part of the world as blaeberry. Blae is the old Scots word for grey and it has this name because of the grey fuzz on the fruit. The other plant commonly called bilberry ( Vaccinium vitus idea) is known as cowberry in the north east and has bright red berries.
this is all so interesting to a deesider .keep up this stuff!
Excellent. Full of information and very well presented. Thank you.
Great talk, thank you! Is the relative sea-level image by Rhona Jenkins (20:00) published and where could I find it for reference?
surely, it is published in CR Wickham-Jones 2018. Landscape Beneath the Waves. Oxbow books. You will find a lot more about sea level change and submerged landscapes in there. And I was wondering aobut doing a lecture on submerged landscapes if people are interested.
Please! A talk on sea level change and it's effect on LUP and Mesolithic evidence in Scotland would be very interesting.
Thanks for a very interesting hour Shannan.
These videos are awesome. Thank you!