Lunchtime Seminar: How do we link pattern recognition with transformations in prehistoric and archaic societies?
17.02.2021 von 12:00 bis 13:30
Leibnizstraße 1, Raum 204 / virtual meeting
Internes Treffen
Hybrides Treffen (attandace & digital)
17.02.2021 von 12:00 bis 13:30
Leibnizstraße 1, Raum 204 / virtual meeting
Internes Treffen
Hybrides Treffen (attandace & digital)
15.02.2021 von 18:30 bis 20:30
Johanna-Mestorf-Str. 4 R. 28 bzw. online
Dr. Viktória Kiss • Akademie der Wissenschaften, Budapest
08.02.2021 von 16:15 bis 17:45
Virtual meeting
Alison Sheridan • Schottisches National Museum
Megalithic chamber tombs – of widely varying shape and size – and non-megalithic funerary monuments loom large in the visible traces of Scotland’s Neolithic, but they formed just one element in a diverse range of practices concerned with dealing with, relating to, and commemorating the dead. This lecture explores this diversity and draws out the regional and chronological trends that can now be discerned, thanks to our growing body of radiocarbon dates. It also attempts to understand the origins, meanings and significance of these funerary monuments, and to identify the ‘drivers’ for the specific trajectories of change that we see.
03.02.2021 von 12:00 bis 13:30
Leibnizstraße 1, Raum 204 / virtual meeting
Internes Treffen
Hybrides Treffen (attandace & digital)
01.02.2021 von 18:30 bis 20:30
Johanna-Mestorf-Str. 4 R. 28 bzw. online
Dr. Alexander Gramsch, M.Phil. • Frankfurt a. M.
25.01.2021 von 16:15 bis 17:45
Virtual meeting
Anna-Kaisa Salmi • Universität Oulu
The domestication of animals has traditionally been understood in terms of human control over the animal’s lives and the subsequent morphological, genetic and population structure change. However, this approach is not sufficient for understanding the domestication of the reindeer, or in fact, the early domestication processes of many other animal species. The commonly used domestication markers, such as morphological, genetic and population structure changes are not likely to reflect domestication in the reindeer as clearly as in many other species because of the limited and varying human influence on the reindeer’s life cycle in past reindeer pastoralism.
This presentation explores alternative ways to identify and understand reindeer domestication. Specifically, I will explore possibilities for tracing human-reindeer interactions such as draught reindeer use and reindeer feeding in the archaeological record as markers of domestication. Understanding domestication in the context on human-animal interaction is in line with current definition of animal domestication as a wide range of mutualistic relationship between human and animals. Furthermore, it allows a range of new archaeological techniques to be used as domestication markers. This lecture will present some the first archaeological results on past reindeer feeding and draught reindeer use, and their implications for human-reindeer relationships.
20.01.2021 von 12:00 bis 13:30
Leibnizstraße 1, Raum 204 / virtual meeting
Internes Treffen
Hybrides Treffen (attandace & digital)
18.01.2021 von 18:30 bis 20:30
Online
Johannes Müller-Kissing • Detmold
11.01.2021 von 16:15 bis 17:45
Virtual meeting
Mary Anne Tafuri • Universität Rom
The application of biomolecular techniques for the study of food practices in prehistoric Europe has revealed an interesting complexity. This is particularly true for the Bronze Age, where the use of ‘alternative’ grains, such as millets, has been assessed isotopically through the measurement of stable carbon (δ13C) and nitrogen (δ15N) isotope ratios in human and animal bone collagen. Earliest evidence of C4 plants consumption comes from northern Italy, with the Po plain acting as a hotspot for the development of the farming of new crops. Isotopic data from Early, Middle and Late Bronze Age sites from western Veneto and Friuli will be discussed in the light of a recent reassessment of our understanding of prehistoric food practices in Italy. Data obtained contribute to the understanding of mode and tempo of the spread of new crops in the Peninsula, which might further call for a reconsideration of food production and consumption among Bronze Age groups of southern and central Europe.
16.12.2020 von 12:00 bis 13:30
Online
Internes Treffen (Online)
15.12.2020 von 17:00 bis 18:30
Online
Social diversity and conflict: a Neolithic lockdown?
In the framework of a Bournemouth University/Kiel University Joint Seminar, the ROOTS Social Inequalities Forum will host two presentations:
The program of the 2020/2021 winter term Bournemouth University "Department of Archaeology & Anthropology Research Seminars" (including the relevant login data) can be downloaded here.
14.12.2020 von 18:30 bis 20:30
Johanna-Mestorf-Straße 4, R. 28 bzw. online
Claus-Stephan Holdermann M. A. • Innsbruck
07.12.2020 von 16:15 bis 17:45
Virtual meeting
Marc Vander Linden • Bournemouth Universität
Despite extensive coverage in academic and popular media, the reports of the solution to the spread of farming have been greatly exaggerated. Namely, whilst recent aDNA research has indeed demonstrated the long-suggested link between population movement and the introduction of plant and animal domesticates across Europe, our understanding of how this process actually happened remains surprisingly limited. What factors were shaping the demographic expansion of this population? How much ecological and environmental parameters did influence this expansion and the known spatio-temporal in agricultural practices? To what extent local foraging communities were involved? This lecture will tackle some of these questions by focusing on the early Holocene sequence in the western Balkans and Adriatic basin, by discussing results gained from fieldwork, synthetic appraisal of museum collections and literature, and computational approaches undertaken as part of a recently completed ERC project.
02.12.2020 von 12:00 bis 13:30
Online
Internes Treffen (Online)
30.11.2020 von 18:30 bis 20:30
Johanna-Mestorf-Straße 4, R. 28 bzw. online
Jun.-Prof. Dr. Julia Meister • Würzburg
Join Zoom Meeting:
https://uni-kiel.zoom.us/j/87361290610?pwd=ZGlLTFpVV1FXaVBlV3ZIV0ZFdzMwQT09
Meeting ID: 873 6129 0610
Passcode: 292758
Join by SIP
87361290610@zoomcrc.com
Join by H.323
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Meeting ID: 873 6129 0610
Passcode: 292758
27.11.2020 von 10:00 bis 15:00
Online in BBB
23.11.2020 von 16:15 bis 17:45
Virtual meeting
Mirco Brunner • Universität Bern
In Southern Central Europe, the Alps are a barrier and a communication area at the same time. While the mountains prevent mobility, passes, yokes and valleys create natural axes for exchange and communication. The Alpine Rhine Valley, which extends deep into the interior of the Alps, forms the most important access to the Central Alps from the north and leads directly into the southern Alpine region between Lago Maggiore and Lago di Como. This central axis was intensively used as a settlement area in prehistoric times and formed an Alpine transit route «par excellence». Recently, ceramic finds from the Neolithic period provide evidence of far-reaching communication processes between the inner and pre-alpine regions. From the Bronze Age onwards, clear influences from the north and south are perceptible in the central Alpine region, which speak to trade routes over the Alpine passes. During the Neolithic and the Bronze Age, the pre-alpine region is subject to massive changes. The aim of this study is a diachronic synthesis of different regions and epochs in order to postulate models of mobility, networks and transformation based on the central alpine area.
18.11.2020 von 12:00 bis 13:30
Ohlshausenstraße 75, Raum 177 / virtual meeting
Internes Treffen
Hybrides Treffen (attandace & digital)
16.11.2020 von 18:30 bis 20:30
Johanna-Mestorf-Straße 4, R. 28 bzw. online
Dr. des. Caroline Heitz • Bern
09.11.2020 von 16:15 bis 17:45
Virtual meeting
Karsten Lambers • Universität Leiden
This talk will provide an update on ongoing archaeological research on the Veluwe, one of the few densely forested areas in the Netherlands. While many archaeological traces are well preserved under the forest cover, they are also well hidden. In spite of decades of archaeological fieldwork by Leiden University and others, our image of the rich archaeological heritage of the Veluwe is still sketchy.
Two recently launched, interlinked research projects are currently expanding our knowledge considerably. Both approach the Veluwe from a regional perspective. In a data science project, called WODAN (Workflow for Object Detection of Archaeology in the Netherlands) we are developing a multi-class detector of archaeological objects in LiDAR data, the core of which is a Faster R-CNN (region-based convolutional neural network). This project has more than doubled the amount of known prehistoric burial mounds in the region, and has also allowed substantial progress in the study of Celtic fields and charcoal kilns. In a citizen science project, called Heritage Quest, hundreds of citizen researchers have been mapping the same three object categories in LiDAR data, and some of them are currently helping us to verify them in the field, which again expands the number of known archaeological objects considerably.
Both projects inform each other through the mutual proposal and cross-validation of potential archaeological objects. They also generate data that allow us to assess and compare the performance of experts, volunteers, and neural networks in the detection and mapping of archaeological objects.
04.11.2020 von 12:00 bis 13:30
Ohlshausenstraße 75, Raum 177 / virtual meeting
Internes Treffen
Hybrides Treffen (attandace & digital)
02.11.2020 von 18:30 bis 20:30
Online
Dr. Alexandra Ion • Anthropology Institute of the Romanian Academy, Bukarest
13.07.2020 von 16:15 bis 17:45
Virtual meeting
Prof. Dr. Cheryl Makarewicz • Institut für Ur- und Frühgeschichte, Universität Kiel
29.06.2020 von 16:15 bis 17:45
Virtual meeting
Prof. Dr. Konrad Ott • Philosophisches Seminar, Universität Kiel
15.06.2020 von 16:15 bis 17:45
Virtual meeting
Prof. Dr. Henny Piezonka • Institut für Ur- und Frühgeschichte, Universität Kiel
10.06.2020 von 12:00 bis 13:30
Virtual meeting
“Identifying transformations: Quantitative interpretations of magnetic measurements in archaeological prospection”
Natalie Marie Pickartz
“Proto-urban settlements in transformation”
Liudmyla Shatilo
03.06.2020 von 12:00 bis 13:30
Virtual meeting
“Wartberg and Corded Ware: One or many transformations?”
Clara Drummer
“Transformation processes in Biosphere, Geosphere and Archaeosphere identified by Biomarkers”
Jan Weber
27.05.2020 von 12:00 bis 13:30
Virtual meeting
“The (trans)formation of an archaeobotanical archive at a Bronze Age tell-like settlement”
Sofia Filatova
“Transformations of a Northern Bronze Age ritual site: Mang de Bargen”
Stefanie Schaefer-Di Maida
25.05.2020 von 16:15 bis 17:45
Virtual meeting
Prof. Dr. Ben Krause-Kyora • Institut für Klinische Molekularbiologie, Universität Kiel
18.05.2020 von 16:15 bis 17:45
Virtual meeting
Prof. Dr. Ingmar Unkel • Institut für Ökosystemforschung, Universität Kiel
13.05.2020 von 12:00 bis 13:30
Virtual meeting
“A retroperspective and future perspectives”
PhD Representatives Joana Seguin, Sascha Krüger
“LANDMAN and Transformations”
Yannic Ole Kropp
04.05.2020 von 16:15 bis 17:45
Virtual meeting
Prof. Dr. Annette Haug • Institut für Klassische Archäologie, Universität Kiel
17.02.2020 von 18:30 bis 20:30
Johanna-Mestorf-Straße 4, R. 28
Saryn Schlotfeld, M.A. • Wilhelmshaven
10.02.2020 von 16:15 bis 17:45
Leibnizstr. 1, Raum 204
Prof. William van Andringa • University of Lille
03.02.2020 von 18:30 bis 20:30
Johanna-Mestorf-Straße 4, R. 28
29.01.2020 ab 12:00
Olshausenstraße 75, Hörsaal 2
Nachbesprechung der Generalprobe der Begutachtung vor Ort vom 27. Januar 2020
20.01.2020 von 18:30 bis 20:30
Johanna-Mestorf-Straße 4, R. 28
Eleonore Pape, M.A. • Göttingen
15.01.2020 ab 12:00
Olshausenstraße 75, Hörsaal 2
Posterpräsentationen der Teilprojekte
13.01.2020 von 16:15 bis 17:45
Leibnizstr. 1, Raum 204
Dr. Seren Griffiths • University of Central Lancashire
08.01.2020 von 12:00 bis 13:30
Olshausenstraße 75, Raum 26
Vorbereitung Begutachtung
18.12.2019 von 12:00 bis 13:30
Olshausenstraße 75, Raum 26
F1:
Supra-regional Crises: Abrupt Climate Change around 4200 years BP
Dr. Mara Weinelt, Dr. Jutta Kneisel, Dr. Christoph Rinne, Prof. Dr. Ralph Schneider, Dr. Artur Ribeiro
E2:
Interregional Comparison of Iron Age Transformations (New Project for Phase 2)
Dr. Oliver Nakoinz, Dr. Simon Stoddart
E3:
Humans and Landscape between the 7th and 1st Centuries BCE in the Eastern Mediterranean (New Project Title)
Prof. Dr. Annette Haug, Prof. Dr. Josef Wiesehöfer, Prof. Dr. Lutz Käppel, Prof. Dr. Patric-Alexander Kreuz, Dr. Claas Lattmann
16.12.2019 von 18:30 bis 20:30
Johanna-Mestorf-Straße 4, R. 28
Prof. Dr. Elke Kaiser • Berlin
09.12.2019 von 16:15 bis 17:45
Leibnizstr. 1, Raum 204
Dr. Klára Šabatová • Masaryk University
03.12.2019 bis 05.12.2019
Akademie Sankemark, Akademieweg 6, 24988 Oeversee
Tagung zum Abschluss des Projektes Megalithic Routes in Schleswig-Holstein
Die Tagung findet vom 03. - 05.12.2019 in der Akademie Sankelmark statt.
Sie sind überall: in Film und Fernsehen, in Europa und Schleswig-Holstein, in der Forschung und Vermittlung, im Tourismus und Denkmalschutz. Großsteingräber wie Stonehenge oder der Brutkamp sind die älteste Architektur unserer Kulturlandschaft – und faszinieren uns noch heute! Drei Tage mit Exkursion – melden Sie sich noch heute an!
Anmeldung: bis zum 15.11.2019
Anmeldung bei Garnet Friedrichsen (g.friedrichsen@eash.de)
Weitere Informationen oder kontaktieren sie Birte Anspach (birte.anspach@alsh.landsh.de) oder Christian Weltecke (christian.weltecke@alsh.landsh.de)
04.12.2019 von 12:00 bis 13:30
Olshausenstraße 75, Raum 26
F3:
Dynamics of Plant Economies in Ancient Societies
Prof. Dr. Wiebke Kirleis, Dr. Dragana Filipovic
C1:
Late Mesolithic and Neolithic Transformations on the Northern and Central European Plain
Dr. Sönke Hartz, Prof. Dr. Johannes Müller, Dr. Jan Piet Brozio
C2:
The Dynamics of Early Farming Communities of the Northwestern Carpathian Basin
Prof. Dr. Martin Furholt, Prof. Dr. Hans-Rudolf Bork, Dr. Maria Wunderlich, Dr. Nils Müller-Scheeßel
02.12.2019 von 18:30 bis 20:30
Johanna-Mestorf-Straße 4, R. 28
Dr. Stefanie Samida • dzt. Fellow am IFK Wien
27.11.2019 bis 28.11.2019
International workshop:
“Millet and what else? The wider context of the adoption of millet cultivation in Europe”
27-28 November 2019
Wissenschaftszentrum Kiel, Germany
Within the Collaborative Research Centre 1266 at Kiel University, the ‘Millet Dating Programme’ (2017-2019) produced direct radiocarbon dates on over a hundred grains of broomcorn millet (Panicum miliaceum L.) from archaeological sites across Europe. The results demonstrate that millet cultivation began during the Middle and Late Bronze Age, at slightly different times in different parts of Europe (Filipović et al. in prep.) and earliest in Ukraine (Dal Corso et al. in prep.). Building upon the now available solid chronological basis, we want to explore how the (beginning of) full cultivation of millet across Europe correlates with changes and new tendencies in economy and lifestyle recognised from the archaeological record. Moving beyond the When?, we want to investigate the How? and Why? of the integration of millet into Bronze Age agrarian systems.
This workshop will present and discuss:
Contact:
Dragana Filipović
d.filipovic@ufg.uni-kiel.de
Confirmed speakers and talks:
László Bartosiewicz
Novelties in animal herding and consumption in Bronze Age Europe Abstract
Blandine Courel
Miliacin in palaeosoils and sediments, a powerful biomarker for telling stories about broomcorn millet Abstract
Oliver Craig
Towards the quantification of millet in ancient diets using stable isotopes
Eiko Endo
Chasing Chinese millets in Ukraine using seed impressions in pottery Abstract
Stefania Grando
Proso millet: cultivation, agronomic practices, and uses Abstract
Mária Hajnalová
Timing the introduction of Panicum miliaceum to the Middle Danube Region – dual evidence Abstract
Monika Hellmund
On the "early" evidence of broomcorn millet in central Germany, primarily Saxony-Anhalt Abstract
Taylor Hermes
Early integration of pastoralism and millet cultivation in Bronze Age Eurasia Abstract
Helmut Kroll
Weedy millets and millet weeds
Marco Madella
Looking away from Europe: A wider perspective on millets in dry lands Abstract
Elena Marinova
Millets in Bulgaria – diachronic overview of their role in the subsistence and critical review of the archaeological finds Abstract
Giedrė Motuzaitė Matuzevičiūtė
Millet cultivation in the Belarus and the Baltic States Abstract
Aldona Mueller-Bieniek
The Bronze Age in Poland - archaeological and environmental traces of subsistence strategies Abstract
Galyna Pashkevych
Ukrainian dishes from millet Abstract
Adéla Pokorná
Bronze Age agricultural changes in the Czech Republic Abstract
Mauro Rottoli
The successful spread of millets in Northern Italy Abstract
Edward Standall
Molecular and isotopic identification of millet in prehistoric pottery: New results from Bruszczewo, Poland Abstract
Hans-Peter Stika
The start of millet cultivation in Iberia Abstract
Astrid Stobbe
Archaeobotany in Romania – investigations in the Late Bronze Age fortification Corneşti-Iarcuri Abstract
Amy Styring
Detecting the manuring of millet in the past Abstract
Naomi Sykes
Chicken feed: tracking the introduction and incorporation of new plants and animals Abstract
Andrés Teira-Brión
Traditional millet growing in NW Iberia: from the ethnographic insights to the archaeobotanical implications Abstract
Tjaša Tolar
Before and after millet in Slovenia, south of the Alps to the Balkans Abstract
Françoise Toulemonde & Julian Wiethold
Millets in Bronze Age agriculture and food consumption in Northeastern France Abstract
Keynote lecture:
Anthony Harding
Change in the later second millennium BC: plants, pots, and people Abstract
Workshop Organisers:
Dragana Filipović
Marta Dal Corso
Wiebke Kirleis
Institute for Pre- and Protohistory, CAU Kiel
25.11.2019 von 16:15 bis 17:45
Leibnizstr. 1, Raum 204
Dr. Claudio Cavazzuti • Museo delle Civiltà (Rome, Ministry of Culture)
20.11.2019 bis 21.11.2019
Workshopleitung: Niels Nørkjær Johannsen und Berit Valentin Eriksen
18.11.2019 von 18:30 bis 20:30
Johanna-Mestorf-Straße 4, R. 28
Prof. Dr. Ralf Gleser • Münster
11.11.2019 von 16:15 bis 17:45
Leibnizstr. 1, Raum 204
Prof. Vincent Gaffney • University of Bradford
06.11.2019 von 12:00 bis 13:30
Olshausenstraße 75, Raum 26
F2:
Socio-environmental Transformations and Interdependencies
Prof. Dr. Hans-Rudolf Bork, Dr. Walter Dörfler, Prof. Dr. Wiebke Kirleis, Dr. Ingo Feeser, Marco Zanon, Dr. Stefan Dreibrodt
F4:
Tracing Infectious Diseases
Prof. Dr. Ben Krause-Kyora, Prof. Dr. Almut Nebel, Dr. Katharina Fuchs, Alexander Immel
F6:
Population Dynamics (New Projekt for Phase 2)
Prof. Dr. Johannes Müller
04.11.2019 von 18:30 bis 20:30
Johanna-Mestorf-Straße 4, R. 28
23.10.2019 von 12:00 bis 13:30
Olshausenstraße 75, Raum 26
Z2:
Data-Management, Analysis and Presentation
Prof. Dr. Rainer Duttmann, Prof. Dr. Bernhard Thalheim, Prof. Dr. Matthias Renz, Dr. Wolfgang Hamer
G1:
Timescales of Change
Dr. John Meadows, Prof. Dr. Thomas Meier
G2:
Geophysical Prospecting, Classification and Validation
Prof. Dr. Wolfgang Rabbel, Dr. Dennis Wilken, Prof. Dr. Thomas Meier, Dr. Tina Wunderlich
21.10.2019 von 18:30 bis 20:30
Johanna-Mestorf-Straße 4, R. 28
08.07.2019 von 18:30 bis 20:30
Johanna-Mestorf-Straße 4, R. 28
Prof. Dr. Rainer Atzbach, Aarhus
03.07.2019 von 12:00 bis 13:30
Leibnizstr. 1, Raum 204
Thema: Templates and structures of subproject-proposals
01.07.2019 von 16:15 bis 17:45
Leibnizstr. 1, Raum 204
Dr Miljana Radivojević • University College London
26.06.2019 bis 27.06.2019
Zentrum für Geoinformation ZfG CAU Kiel, Neufeldstr. 10, Laurispark – Gebäude 32
24.06.2019 von 18:30 bis 20:30
Johanna-Mestorf-Straße 4, R. 28
19.06.2019 von 12:00 bis 13:30
Leibnizstr. 1, Raum 204
Thema: How can we re-formulate our hypothesis?
05.06.2019 von 12:00 bis 13:30
Leibnizstr. 1, Raum 204
Thema: What was the state of the art before the CRC? Which knowledge gains have been approached?
03.06.2019 von 18:30 bis 20:30
Johanna-Mestorf-Straße 4, R. 28
Torsten Schunke M. A., Halle (Saale)
27.05.2019 von 16:15 bis 17:45
Leibnizstr. 1, Raum 204
Dr. Jutta Lechterbeck • University of Stavanger
22.05.2019 von 12:00 bis 13:30
Leibnizstr. 1, Raum 204
Thema: How important is the acquisition of which data for further inquiries?
20.05.2019 von 18:30 bis 20:30
Johanna-Mestorf-Straße 4, R. 28
13.05.2019 von 16:15 bis 17:45
Leibnizstr. 1, Raum 204
Dr. Cameron Petrie • University of Cambridge
08.05.2019 von 12:00 bis 13:30
Leibnizstr. 1, Raum 204
Thema: How can we use the manifold temporal, spatial and social dimensions of transformations for pattern recognition?
06.05.2019 von 18:30 bis 20:30
Johanna-Mestorf-Straße 4, R. 28
29.04.2019 von 16:15 bis 17:45
Leibnizstr. 1, Raum 204
Prof. Dr. Mark Pearce • University of Nottingham
24.04.2019 von 12:00 bis 13:30
Leibnizstr. 1, Raum 204
Thema: How to transfer single observations into meaningful conclusions
15.04.2019 von 16:15 bis 17:45
Leibnizstr. 1, Raum 204
Dr. Kerstin Kowarik and Hans Reschreiter • Natural History Museum in Vienna
11.03.2019 bis 16.03.2019
Kiel University
27.02.2019 bis 28.02.2019
Leibnizstraße 1, Raum 207
Workshop der Teilprojekte C1 und F5. Organisatoren: Niels Nørkjær Johannsen, Universität Aarhus, Jan Piet Brozio, Johannes Müller.
18.02.2019 von 18:30 bis 20:30
Johanna-Mestorf-Straße 4, R. 28
Prof. Dr. Thomas Saile, Regensburg
13.02.2019 von 12:00 bis 13:30
Dissertation Transformations
„Geo–archaeological and Palaeo–pedological Analysis in Stymphalia“ – T. Birndorfer, E1
„Climate Change in the Western Mediterranean around 4.2 ka BP“ – J. Schirrmacher, F1
Leibnizstraße 8, Room 126/128
11.02.2019 von 16:15 bis 17:45
Leibnizstr. 1, Room 204
Caroline Peschaux • CNRS, France
!!!CANCELLED!!!
04.02.2019 von 18:30 bis 20:30
Johanna-Mestorf-Straße 4, R. 28
Dr. Barbara Hausmair, Esslingen
30.01.2019 von 12:00 bis 13:30
Dissertation Transformations
„Southern Greece Climate during the Bronze Age – Iron Age Transition“ – J. Seguin, E1
„Transformations in the Early Iron Age Eastern Mediterranean“ – K. Kittig, A1
Leibnizstraße 8, Room 126/128
28.01.2019 von 16:15 bis 17:45
Leibnizstr. 1, Room 204
Tim Kerig • Leipzig University
Abstract
21.01.2019 von 18:30 bis 20:30
Johanna-Mestorf-Straße 4, R. 28
Dr. Immo Heske, Göttingen
16.01.2019 von 12:00 bis 13:30
Dissertation Transformations
„Bronze Age Transformations in Northern Germany“ – S. Schaefer-Di Maida, D3
„Bridging the Scales: Archaeological and Geophysical Data“ – E. Corradini, G2
„Biomarker Perspectives from Bronze to Iron Age Southern Greece“ – J. Weber, E1
Leibnizstraße 8, Room 126/128
14.01.2019 von 16:15 bis 17:45
Leibnizstr. 1, Room 204
Wolfram Schier • Freie Universität Berlin
07.01.2019 von 18:30 bis 20:30
Johanna-Mestorf-Straße 4, R. 28
Dr. Bettina Schulz Paulsson, Göteborg
19.12.2018 von 12:00 bis 13:30
Dissertation Transformations
„Final Neolithic Technical Pottery and Metal Developments“ – M. Talma, D2
„Dynamics of Food Economy in Bronze Age Hungary“ – S. Filatova, F3
Leibnizstraße 8, Room 126/128
17.12.2018 von 16:15 bis 17:45
Leibnizstr. 1, Room 204
Renate Ebersbach • University of Basel, Switzerland
10.12.2018 von 18:30 bis 20:30
Johanna-Mestorf-Straße 4, R. 28
Dr. Frigga Kruse, Rendsburg
05.12.2018 von 12:00 bis 13:30
Dissertation Transformations
„Wartberg Culture to Single Grave Culture Transformations“ – C. Drummer, D2
„View-based Data Management“ – Y. Kropp, Z2
Leibnizstraße 8, Room 126/128
03.12.2018 von 16:15 bis 17:45
Leibnizstr. 1, Room 204
Martin Bartelheim • University of Tübingen
26.11.2018 von 18:30 bis 20:30
Johanna-Mestorf-Straße 4, R. 28
Dr. Anne Sklebitz, Berlin
21.11.2018 von 12:00 bis 13:30
Dissertation Transformations
„Theories on Neolithic Monumentality“ – J. Brinkmann, A1
Leibnizstraße 8, Room 126/128
19.11.2018 von 16:15 bis 17:45
Leibnizstr. 1, Room 204
Thomas Stöllner • Ruhr-Universität Bochum
12.11.2018 von 18:30 bis 20:30
Johanna-Mestorf-Straße 4, R. 28
Prof. Peter Jordan, Groningen
07.11.2018 von 12:00 bis 13:30
Dissertation Transformations
„Typochronological Studies onTripolie Societies“ – L. Shatilo, D1
„Quantitative Interpretation of Magnetic Measurements“ – N. Pickartz, G2
Leibnizstraße 8, Room 126/128
05.11.2018
Leibnizstraße 1, Room 204
Catalin Lazar • University of Bucharest, Romania
30.10.2018 bis 01.11.2018
Kiel University, Internationales Begegnungszentrum (IBZ), Kiellinie 5
29.10.2018 von 18:30 bis 20:30
Johanna-Mestorf-Straße 4, R. 28
Dr. Vera Hubensack, Leipzig
Programm 2018/19 als PDF
24.10.2018 von 12:00 bis 13:30
Dissertation Transformations
„Lateglacial Hunter-Gatherers in Schleswig-Holstein“ – S. Krüger, B1
„Late Bronze Age to Early Iron Age Bayesian Modelling“ – H. Rose, G1
Leibnizstraße 8, Room 126/128
22.10.2018 von 16:15 bis 17:45
Leibnizstraße. 1, Room 204
Estelle Herrscher • Aix-Marseille University, France
05.09.2018 bis 08.09.2018
Barcelona
24th Annual Meeting of the European Association of Archaeologists
Call for papers for sessions with CRC involvement:
Paper submission deadline: 15 February 2018
16.07.2018 von 18:30 bis 20:30
Johanna-Mestorf-Hörsaal (Eingang 4, Erdgeschoss), Johanna-Mestorf-Straße 4, R 28, EG
Prof. Dr. Katharina Neumann (Frankfurt am Main) Zwischen Savanne und Regenwald – Zur Landwirtschaftsgeschichte Westund Zentralafrikas
11.07.2018 von 12:00 bis 13:30
Leibnizstr. 1, Raum 204
Proxy Development II
Media of transformation (perception, performance and architecture)
(Käppel, Ott, van t’Westeinde)
Object biographies (Haug, Müller)
Theoretical frameworks
Theory and analysis of transformations in prehistoric and archaic societies
(Arponen, Thalheim, ott, Grimm, Brinkmann, Kittig, Filatova, Kropp)
+ Final discussion (possibly until 2 p.m.)
09.07.2018 von 16:15 bis 17:45
Leibnizstraße 1, Raum 204
Doris Mischka (Universität Erlangen)
Abstract PDF
02.07.2018 von 18:30 bis 20:30
Johanna-Mestorf-Hörsaal (Eingang 4, Erdgeschoss), Johanna-Mestorf-Straße 4, R 28, EG
Malou Blank, PhD candidate (Göteborg) Transformations from Middle to Late Neolithic Societies in Southwestern Sweden
28.06.2018 bis 29.06.2018
Schloss Gottorf, Schleswig
programme t.b.a.
27.06.2018 von 12:00 bis 13:30
Leibnizstr. 1, Raum 204
Settlements & Spatial Transformations II
Architecture and social interaction (Feuser, Furholt, Haug, A. Müller, Feige)
Proxy Development I
Cultural change and population dynamics in the Neolithic and Bronze Age
(Fesser, Kneisel, Dörfler, Brozio, Filipovic, Schaefer)
Monuments and Economies – what drove their variability?
(Müller, Furholt, Meier, Cristiano, Talma, Schaefer)
25.06.2018 von 16:15 bis 17:45
Leibnizstraße 1, Raum 204
Vincent Guichard (Bibracte EPCC)The oppida of the Celtic domain, witnesses of a sacoety transition
Abstract PDF
18.06.2018 bis 19.06.2018
Kiel University
18.06.2018 von 18:30 bis 20:30
Johanna-Mestorf-Hörsaal (Eingang 4, Erdgeschoss), Johanna-Mestorf-Straße 4, R 28, EG
Prof. Dr. Christian Jeunesse (Straßburg) Ethnoarchaeology of current Megalithic Societies (Sumba, Indonesia) and the interpretation of Late European Societies
Abstract PDF
13.06.2018 von 12:00 bis 13:30
Leibnizstr. 1, Raum 204
Settlements & Spatial Transformations I
Temporal dynamics of LBK settlements and houses
(Müller-Scheeßel, Meadows, Rose, Furholt)
Deciphering archaeological contexts from the magnetic map
(Hofmann, Rabbel, Wilken, Dreibrodt, Pickartz, Shatilo)
11.06.2018 von 16:15 bis 17:45
Leibnizstraße 1, Raum 204
Joseph Maran (Universität Heidelberg) Stepping out of The Shadow of Mycenae The Remarkable Case of Late 13th and 12th cent. BCE Tiryns (Argolid, Greece)
04.06.2018 von 18:30 bis 20:30
Johanna-Mestorf-Hörsaal (Eingang 4, Erdgeschoss), Johanna-Mestorf-Straße 4, R 28, EG
Doc. PhDr. Pavel Vařeka, Ph.D.(Plzeň) Archaeology of a Zigeunerlager: Lety 1942–1943 (South Bohemia, Czech Republic)
04.06.2018 von 16:15 bis 17:45
Emily Hammer (University of Pennsilvania)
28.05.2018 von 18:30 bis 20:30
Johanna-Mestorf-Hörsaal (Eingang 4, Erdgeschoss), Johanna-Mestorf-Straße 4, R 28, EG
Jens-Henrik Bech, Museumsinspector, mag. art. (Thy) Bronze Age Settlement and Land-use in Thy, Northwest Denmark
28.05.2018 von 16:15 bis 17:45
Leibnizstraße 1, Raum 204
Leonardo Garcia Sanjuán (Universidad de Sevilla) Lineages, Labour and Exotica: Discussing Elites within Southern Iberian Copper Age Societies (ca. 3200-2200 calBC)
23.05.2018 von 12:00 bis 13:30
Leibnizstr. 1, Raum 204
Integrative Modelling: Transforming landscapes / Cultural change and population dynamics / Modelling landscape transformations
16.05.2018 von 12:00 bis 13:30
Leibnizstr. 1, Raum 204
Perspectives on Transformations II: 5.2 Climate and Archaeology
14.05.2018 von 18:30 bis 20:30
Johanna-Mestorf-Hörsaal (Eingang 4, Erdgeschoss), Johanna-Mestorf-Straße 4, R 28, EG
Dr. des. Susanne Grunwald (Leipzig) Vom Datenspeicher zum Argument. Deutsche archäologische Kartographie zwischen 1871 und 1945
02.05.2018 von 12:00 bis 13:30
Leibnizstr. 1, Raum 204
Perspectives on Transformations
Human Adaptations & Social Transformations
26.04.2018 bis 27.04.2018
Brodten/Travemünde, Theodor-Schwartz-Haus
Open to CRC members and invited guests. Detailed programme t.b.a.
23.04.2018 von 16:15 bis 17:45
Leibnizstraße 1, Raum 204
Miroslav Marić (University of Belgrade), Encircled in water, living in water rich enviroment of the Serbian Banat during the late Neolithic period.
The area of Northeast Serbia, east of River Tisza and North of Danube called Banat has, until vast reclamation works started in the 18th century, been a water rich environment that provided limited oportunities for permanent settlements. And yet, from the earliest period of the human habitation, the Neolithic there are numerous settlements registered in the area that show avid effort being put into living in such conditions. In the lecture two regional cases are observed, one around the area of the city of Vršac in southern part of Serbian Banat and the second in the northern area, north of the city of Kikinda. Each area, although rich in surface water is somewhat different, southern being dominated by two large bodies of still water, northern by former meanders of Tisza and numerous smaller streams and rivers. The lecture will illustrate how did such landscape influenced the forming, positioning, longevity and size of settlements during the late Neolithic.
18.04.2018 von 12:00 bis 13:30
Leibnizstr. 1, Raum 209
Tackling TransFORMATION
Working group formation / Retreat planning
12.03.2018 bis 24.03.2018
Kohima in Nagaland, India
The Nordic School of Archaeology "Dialogues with the Past" organizes a workshop that is comined with a PhD course on issues of monumentality in Kohima, India. The course will take place in Nagaland together with students and lecturers from Northeast India and the "Naga megaliths" will be one aspect of daily experience.
Applications are welcome until September 30th, 2017. More information: hompage and PDF.
08.03.2018 bis 10.03.2018
Innerhalb des Geflechts der unterschiedlichen Komponenten sozialen Verhaltens, nimmt die Kategorie des sozialen Geschlechts in den Gesellschaften von den spätpleistozänen sammelnden und jagenden Gruppen bis zu den frühstädtischen Gemeinschaften eine dominante Rolle ein. So kann eine deutliche Interaktion zwischen Geschlechteridentitäten, sozialer Vielfalt und den im SFB 1266 untersuchten Transformationsprozessen in prähistorischen und archaischen Perioden erwartet werden. Mit dem Workshop möchten wir eine Plattform anbieten für Diskussionen über a) Geschlechtertransformationen in der Vergangenheit und b) die Auswirkungen von Geschlechterungleichheiten auf den wissenschaftlichen Diskurs in unserer Forschungsgemeinschaft.
Weitere Informationen
12.02.2018 von 18:30 bis 20:30
Johanna-Mestorf-Hörsaal (Eingang 4, Erdgeschoss), Johanna-Mestorf-Straße 4, R 28, EG
Aktuelle Forschungen in der Mongolei
PDF
07.02.2018 von 12:00 bis 13:30
Leibnizstr. 1, Room 204
FOCUS 4: Transformations, Dating and Geophysics (G1–2)
05.02.2018 von 16:15 bis 17:45
Leibnizstraße 1, Raum 204
Rhiannon Stevens (University College, London) UpNorth: Exploring the Environmental Context of the Late-glacial Recolonisation of Northern Europe
Abstract
05.02.2018 von 16:15 bis 17:45
Leibnizstraße 1, Raum 204
Rhiannon Stevens (University College, London) UpNorth: Exploring the Environmental Context of the Late-glacial Recolonisation of Northern Europe
Abstract
29.01.2018 von 18:30 bis 20:30
Johanna-Mestorf-Hörsaal (Eingang 4, Erdgeschoss), Johanna-Mestorf-Straße 4, R 28, EG
Social Aspects of Tripyllia Figurines
24.01.2018 von 12:00 bis 13:30
Leibnizstr. 1, Room 204
FOCUS 3: Population Development, Disease and Technology (F4–5)
22.01.2018 von 16:15 bis 17:45
Leibnizstraße 1, Raum 204
Patrick Sakdapolrak (University of Vienna) Resilience through Translocality. Climate Change, Migration and Social Resilience in Thailand
15.01.2018 von 18:30 bis 20:30
Johanna-Mestorf-Hörsaal (Eingang 4, Erdgeschoss), Johanna-Mestorf-Straße 4, R 28, EG
Archäologie in Georgien. Bronze- und Früheisenzeit in Georgien (Grabungen und Ergebnisse)
10.01.2018 von 12:00 bis 13:30
Leibnizstr. 1, Room 204
FOCUS 3: Climate, Soils & Vegetation (F1–3)
08.01.2018 von 16:15 bis 17:45
Leibnizstraße 1, Raum 204
Samantha Reiter, Karin Margerita Frei (National Museum of Denmark, Kopenhagen)
Flux Capacity: Modelling the Impetus Behind Human Movement
20.12.2017 von 12:00 bis 13:30
Leibnizstr. 1, Room 204
FOCUS 2: Pre-State & State Societies (E1+3)
11.12.2017 von 16:15 bis 17:45
Leibnizstraße 1, Raum 204
Gregson Schachner (University of California, L.A.) Do New Methods Require New Models? Archaeological Studies of Mobility in a New Era
Abstract
07.12.2017 bis 08.12.2017
Geosophy...a catchy term for the study of geographical knowledge. We think that the spatial distribution and patterning of material remains contain important information about the way how people thought about their world and how they created their landscape.
During the workshop we want to discuss the different meanings and potentials of geosophy concepts. Besides we will discuss to which degree we are able to reconstruct and model "geographical knowledge" in order to gain new insights for the study of societal transformation processes.
06.12.2017 von 12:00 bis 13:30
Leibnizstr. 1, Room 204
FOCUS 2: Agriculturalists and First Metallurgists (D1–3)
04.12.2017 von 18:30 bis 20:30
Johanna-Mestorf-Hörsaal (Eingang 4, Erdgeschoss), Johanna-Mestorf-Straße 4, R 28, EG
Jüdisches Köln: Spurensuche von der Spätantike bis zum Mittelalter
27.11.2017 von 16:15 bis 17:45
Leibnizstraße 1, Raum 204
Sofija Stefanovic (Biosense Institute, University of Novi Sad) Prehistoric Babies in the Neolithic Transition: First Results of the ERC BIRTH Project
23.11.2017 bis 24.11.2017
Invited speakers will discuss changes in the chaîne opératoire for the production of ceramic, lithic and organic artefacts at relatively fine temporal scales, mainly focusing on European prehistory.
The aim is to observe the process of innovation, from the initial appearance of new technologies to their adoption and diffusion.
In particular, discussion will focus on how technical skills are transmitted and reproduced. However, we also need to understand the social context and historical circumstances before attempting to explain these patterns.
This would lead to a better understanding of the factors promoting innovation in prehistoric societies. Are more egalitarian societies less innovative? Is craft specialisation indivisible from social complexity? Are innovations more acceptable during periods of stability or crisis? Is there a relationship between innovation and inter-connectedness (or isolation)? Is the old idea that every change was driven by external influences really irrelevant today?
Poster PDF Flyer PDF Program PDF
22.11.2017 von 12:00 bis 13:30
Leibnizstr. 1, Room 204
FOCUS 2: Complex Foreagers and Horticulturalists (B1–C2)
20.11.2017 von 18:30 bis 20:30
Johanna-Mestorf-Hörsaal (Eingang 4, Erdgeschoss), Johanna-Mestorf-Straße 4, R 28, EG
Ertrunkene Landschaften – paläoökologische und archäologische Untersuchungen am Nordseegrund
PDF
08.11.2017 von 12:00 bis 17:00
Leibnizstr. 1, Room 204
12:00 FOCUS 1
Theory and Modelling (A1–2)
14:00 PLENARY MEETING
Transforming Interdisciplinary Challenges into Strengths (until 5 p.m.)
06.11.2017 von 18:30 bis 20:30
Johanna-Mestorf-Hörsaal (Eingang 4, Erdgeschoss), Johanna-Mestorf-Straße 4, R 28, EG
Von Alchemisten, Soldaten und Druckerpressen...Höhlen im Mittelalter und der Frühen Neuzeit
01.11.2017 von 12:00 bis 13:30
Leibnizstr. 1, Room 204
Data Management and Presentation (Z2)
30.10.2017 von 16:15 bis 17:45
Leibnizstraße 1, Raum 204
Robert Spengler (Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History, Jena) The Spread of Crops across Central Asia
23.10.2017 von 18:30 bis 20:30
Johanna-Mestorf-Hörsaal (Eingang 4, Erdgeschoss), Johanna-Mestorf-Straße 4, R 28, EG
Implementation of geoelectrical research in archaeology: the site of Bordoš as the case study
Einladung PDF
17.07.2017 bis 21.07.2017
Einstein Center Chronoi, Freie Universität Berlin, Otto-von-Simson Str. 7,14195 Berlin
A change is happening at the moment. „Open“ is the new paradigm for software, data access, exchange and publication.
One of the greatest benefits of this change is that re-producible research actually becomes possible. However, there are some elementary things a researcher needs
to take care of in order to allow others (or themselves) to re-produce and re-analyze their published study. Prof. Ben Marwick, one of the leading practitioners in the context of (landscape) archaeology, will present techniques and tools for reproducible research which are applied and tested within this summer school.
Summer School 'Reproducible Research in (Landscape) Archaeology' is jointly organised by CRC 1266 and Excellence Cluster Topoi.
Poster
12.07.2017 von 12:00 bis 13:30
Johanna-Mestorf-Hörsaal, Johanna-Mestorf-Str. 4, Raum 28
Summary and outlook towards winter term 2017/18