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ChemArch: The organic chemistry and molecular biology of archaeological artefacts

Description du projet

Quand l’archéologie rencontre la chimie analytique et la biologie

L’archéologie est généralement associée aux fouilles, à l’étude des structures et à la datation des découvertes. Cependant, de nombreux domaines ont développé des techniques avancées et de nouveaux outils chimiques et biologiques qui donnent accès à des informations détaillées inestimables pour notre compréhension des peuples et des cultures anciennes. Une formation pluridisciplinaire est indispensable pour exploiter ce formidable potentiel. Le projet ChemArch, financé par l’UE, développe un réseau mondial de laboratoires, de fabricants et de fournisseurs d’équipements analytiques, de musées et d’archéologues en vue de soutenir un programme de doctorat faisant le lien entre les approches scientifiques analytiques et l’archéologie. L’équipe élaborera également des bonnes pratiques et des outils pour ce nouveau domaine passionnant qui nous aidera tous à mieux comprendre et à préserver le patrimoine préhistorique unique de l’Europe.

Objectif

We propose a European Joint Doctorate in response to the need for early stage training between the analytical sciences and archaeology. Archaeological chemistry, biomolecular archaeology and archaeometry are fast growing disciplines that have reinvigorated research of museum and archaeological artefacts. These approaches now offer forensic detail regarding the origin, manufacture and use of iconic and everyday items in the past. Articles published in the last year alone, such as the extraction of human genomes from Stone Age ‘chewing gum’, the fashioning of prehistoric hunting weapons from human remains, and the identification of milk in ancient ceramic infant feeding bottles, show how this field continues to influence a range of scholars, change curatorial practice and capture the attention of the global public. However, recruiting researchers with the necessary interdisciplinary skills to meet the rapid expansion of the field has been difficult.

To address this challenge ChemArch will:

- Support the career development and training of 15 doctoral students crossing the sectoral divide between the natural and analytical sciences and social sciences.
- Create a network of European specialist labs with complementary expertise and wordwide reach.
- Link these specialised labs with non-academic research organisations, analytical instrument manufacturers, museums and field work units.
- Provide coherent training around a thematic program converging on advancing our understanding of Europe’s rich prehistoric artefact record.
- Involve leading organisations with a sustained history of delivering world-leading interdisciplinary science/humanities training at doctoral level.
- Provide a durable legacy through the joint creation of guidelines for best practice in the field and the lab and tools to help predict where future research efforts are best directed.
- Engage the public through outreach events, a set of Wikipedia entries and educational videocasts.

Coordinateur

UNIVERSITY OF YORK
Contribution nette de l'UE
€ 1 515 862,80
Adresse
HESLINGTON
YO10 5DD York North Yorkshire
Royaume-Uni

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Région
Yorkshire and the Humber North Yorkshire York
Type d’activité
Higher or Secondary Education Establishments
Liens
Coût total
€ 1 515 862,80

Participants (3)