The importance of stone tool miniaturization for early Homo sapiens
14 December 2020, 4:00 pm–5:00 pm
The final seminar in the UCL Institute of Archaeology Research Seminar virtual series for Term I, 2020-21 will be given by Ceri Shipton on 14 December.
This event is free.
Event Information
Open to
- UCL staff | UCL students
Cost
- Free
Organiser
-
Institute of Archaeology Sections
UCL Institute of Archaeology Research Seminars Programme | Term I, 2020-21
The Term I seminar series, which this year is being held virtually, highlights current Institute of Archaeology research.
Mondays, 4pm (online via MSTeams)
- 19 October: Matthew Pope (Archaeological Sciences): The La Cotte de St Brelade Bone ‘Heaps’ Reconsidered
- 26 October: Corinna Riva (World Archaeology): Citizenship and urban states in 1st-millennium BC Mediterranean
2 November: Eva Mol (World Archaeology): Iseum Campense Virtual Histories Project, the archaeology of imagination
[9 November: Reading Week - no seminar]
- 16 November: Caitlin O’Grady (Heritage Studies): Negotiating knowledge and expertise: heritage, disciplinary power and preservation of the past
- 23 November: Elaine Charwat (Heritage Studies): Is it real?' Authenticity and natural history collections
- 30 November: Mark Altaweel (Archaeological Sciences): Quantifying Object Similarity: Using Locality Sensitive Hashing for Comparing Material Culture
- 7 December: Tim Schadla-Hall (World Archaeology): The Archaeology and History of Admiral Ball's Gardens in Malta - a non-imperial initiative?
- 14 December: Ceri Shipton (Archaeological Sciences): The importance of stone tool miniaturization for early Homo sapiens