Periodic Reporting for period 1 - ANDSU (Attesting Neanderthal dwelling space use: effects of human occupations in the Middle Palaeolithic record of Fumane cave)
Okres sprawozdawczy: 2020-08-01 do 2022-07-31
Archaeological knowledge, artefacts, sites, and landscapes, also extended in the field of Neanderthal, can help teach the younger generation about the past: the paths humans have crossed and the attempts and experiments they have made towards creating contemporary society. The potential of this discipline for fostering more intelligent, involved global citizens is considerable. Learning about archaeology helps students develop various skills across many disciplines, including critical thinking. Archaeology can be readily included in a comprehensive curriculum for social science, history, mathematics, environmental studies, and art. Society learns to appreciate history from different frames of reference, developing a sensitivity to other people and diverse cultures.
Objectives of this Marie Skłodowska Curie Action (MSCA) have been to:
1) perform manually faunal refits in three levels of Fumane cave, which are A9 (47.6-45.0 Ky Cal BP) and A6-A5 (44.8-42.2 Ky Cal B.P.);
2) experiment with the 3D scan of a sample of bones, adapting an existing and successful methodology;
3) apply geometric analysis on 3D models of selected bones.
The action has been concluded.
For researcher training and transfer of knowledge, the fellow attended six intensive training workshops and multi-day conferences on scientific fields (statistics, geometric morphometrics and GIS). To transfer the knowledge and results acquired, two online virtual tours with European institutions, museums and universities and 2 seminaries inside the Host institution were performed, both for researchers and the general public.
The fellow was appointed to different scientific associations in the field of Archaeology. Results of this MSCA are reported in one paper (to be published in the next months) and forthcoming papers on the results of spatial distributions inside the Mousterian levels of Fumane cave.
This MSCA allowed the Fellow to develop agility with many different research methodologies and promote best practices in the field of Neanderthal evolution.
The project will generate new and important data about the processes and organizational systems of our ancestors, and results will be used to make comparisons among other European sites. Impacts anticipated from the MSCA are increased and improved: focus by researchers on the results obtained at Fumane cave (to be implemented in the future) and focus on ethics and sustainability in scientific education. A final overarching impact is enhanced public perception of Archaeology and evolution as an important point for the human journey.