MPG Software Workshop 2015 - Schwerpunkt Lizenzmanagement

Titel der Vortragsreihe
Wiss. Vortrag von Johannes Krause, Direktor der Abteilung für Archäogenetik im Rahmen des 61. Ernst-Abbe-Kolloquiums. [mehr]

PHD Workshop Abteilung Archäogenetik

Treffen des IT-Sprecherkreises der MPG

IT-Sprecherkreistreffen der MPG

IT workshop - Abteilung Archäogenetik

Corvid Folk Meeting

Vortrag von Anne-Maria Fehn

DLCE Talk
Dog, Cattle, Sheep: What livestock vocabulary can tell us about the early spread of pastoralism in Southern Africa [mehr]

Vortrag von Elisabeth de Boer

DLCE Talk
How and when was Japan settled by speakers of Japanese? Exploring the clues to Japanese prehistory preserved in old dialect divisions [mehr]

Offener Tag der Linguistik

Am 9. Dez. lädt die Abt. Sprach- und Kulturevolution linguistisch Interessierte der FSU Jena von 14.00-17.00 Uhr zum gegenseitigen Kennenlernen, Kurz-Vorträgen und anschließender Diskussion ein. [mehr]

Vortrag von Ana Kondic

Documentation of a Moribund Language [mehr]

Vortrag von Ana Kondic

DLCE Talk
Documentation of a Moribund Language [mehr]

WIN-Treffen

Vortrag von Francesca Conselvan [mehr]

Vortrag von Ana Kondic

On expression of space and complex motion events in American indigenous languages (Mayan and Mapudungan) [mehr]

Vortrag von Ana Kondic

DLCE Talk
On expression of space and complex motion events in American indigenous languages (Mayan and Mapudungan) [mehr]

Vortrag von Ulrike Zeshan

DLCE Talk
Sign Language Typology and Cross-Modal Typology [mehr]

Vortrag von Rui Martiniano

DAG Talk
aDNA and the Prehistory of the British Isles [mehr]

Vortrag von Choongwon Jeong

DAG Talk
High altitude East Asians: genetic history and adaptations to altitude [mehr]

Vortrag von Felix Key

DAG Talk
Human Adaptation in the Light of Ancient and Modern Genomes [mehr]

Vortrag von Anna Gosling

DAG Talk
Evolutionary explanations for gout among Pacific populations, with particular focus on mtDNA variation [mehr]

Vortrag von Christina Warinner

DAG Talk
Reconstructing the ancestral human microbiome [mehr]

MPG Seminar "Presentation Skills for Postdocs"

  • Beginn: 07.04.2016 08:00
  • Ende: 08.04.2016 18:00
  • Raum: Villa V03

Doktoranden Workshop DAG

Natural experiments in psychology [mehr]
Schüler/innen ab der 8. Klasse aufgepasst: Entdeckt, wie spannend die Menschheitsgeschichte ist! Wissenschaftlerinnen und Wissenschaftler am Max-Planck-Institut für Menschheitsgeschichte laden euch ein, mehr über einzelne Forschungsfragen zu erfahren und mit ihnen kleine Aufgaben und Tests zu ganz unterschiedlichen Fragestellungen durchzuführen. [mehr]

Vortrag von Cordelia Mühlenbeck

DLCE Talk
On the origins of artistic behaviour and aesthetic universals [mehr]

Genome Analysis Workshop (PoPGen)

DAG Workshop

Genome Analysis Workshop (PoPGen)

DAG Workshop

Vortrag von Michael Haslam

DLCE Talk
Primate archaeology: initial results and future directions [mehr]

MINT - Doktorandenworkshop

Gastvortrag Pavel Flegontov

DAG Talk
Siberian ancestry in Na-Dene speakers, where did it come from? [mehr]

Vortrag von Benjamin Touati

DLCE Talk
The free plural personal markers in Island Melanesia (Solomon Islands, Vanuatu, New Caledonia): a statistical approach [mehr]

Vortrag von David Gil

DLCE Talk
Putting Words Together: Typology Reflects Phylogeny [mehr]

Vortrag von Carina Schlebusch

DLCE Talk
Genetic History of Southern Africa [mehr]

Vortrag von Helena Miton

The Mint Talk
Explaining the spread of maladaptive medical beliefs [mehr]

Neue Methoden in Archäologie und Geschichtswissenschaften

Workshop für Doktorand/-innen und Postdocs der Archäologie und Geschichte

Vortrag von Päivi Onkamo

DAG Talk
"The project on ancient Finno-Ugrians" [mehr]

Vortrag von Jargal Badagarov

DLCE Talk
A phylolinguistic approach of the Mongolic languages. [mehr]

Talk by Alexander Adelaar

DLCE Talk
"Malagasy linguistic history and the development of Malagasy body-part terms" [mehr]

Vortrag von Ilan Gronau

DAG Talk
It runs in the family tree - using explicit genealogies to interrogate (ancient) individual genomes [mehr]

Grambank coder´s workshop

DLCE Workshop

BEAST2 Workshop/Tutorial for DLCE and DAG

BEAST2 [mehr]

Masterclass on Quantitative Methods

DLCE Workshop

Glottobank

DLCE Workshop

Isotopic evidence of human dietary transition in ancient China

In my presentation, the concept and the principle of stable isotope analysis will be introduced at first. Secondly, some important thresholds for human dietary transition in ancient China, such as the focus in aquatic foods in the late Pleistocene, the occurrence and development of agriculture and its impact on human dietary evolution and so on, will be revealed by this method. At last, the application to investigating animal domestication by stable isotope analysis will be discussed as well. [mehr]

Molecular evidence for exploitation ofbiological resources along the Silk Road, Xinjiang, China

Xinjiang province is located in Northwestern China, and close to the Central Asia and Southern Asia. Thus, Xinjiang is an important part of the Silk Road. Specially, most of cultivated plants and domesticated animal were introduced from outside. Due to the desert environment in the Southern Xinjiang, some organic materials preserve very well, which could provide a good chance to understand the products from animal and plants besides zooarchaeology and archaeobotany research. In this presentation, we mainly used proteomics and GC/MS to identify the nature and biological origins of organic residue to better understand exploitation of biological resources and culture communication. The exploitation of cattle and ephedra in Xiaohe Culture (about3500-4000 BP), one of earliest culture in the Bronze Age, has been investigated, and dairy products, animal glue and cosmetic stick made of cattle heart have been identified, which reflect how ancient Xiaohe people tried to adapt the hostile desert environment. In Subeixi Culture, the early Iron Age(about 2900-2200BP), fermented bread made of barley and millet has been identified. In the Astana Cemetery, the famous site in the Turpan Basin (about6th- 9th century AD), the lamp oil from sesame and the body wash powder made of pea have been identified. Then, details of life customs of ancient people and culture communication have been disclosed. Therefore, molecular analysis can provide abundant information about the exploitation of biological resources along the Silk Road. [mehr]

Reading the palaeoclimatic and –environmental history from lake sediments – Examples from the ICLEA key site Lake Czechowskie (N Poland)

The consequences of climate change on the human habitat are under great debate and yet not precisely predictable, why the differentiation between natural climate variability and human induced climate change is one of the major challenges for the scientific community. The overarching goal is to understand the climate system on various spatiotemporal scales from which most are beyond a human lifetime perception. Thus, the period of instrumental climate observations is not sufficient alone, since only high frequency changes are fully captured. In order to decipher and understand the mechanisms of climate variability the investigation of geological archives is used as they continuously record past climatic and environmental changes. In the continental area, lake records provide ideal natural archives to study the complex interactions between the climate and the ecosystem and, if located amidst the human habitat, the influences and responses of human activities. To differentiate between these impacts high resolution lake records are essential as they sufficiently capture the different degree of climate variability and act as a natural “memory” far beyond the period of human induced changes. This talk will give an overview of the annually laminated (varved) record of Lake Czechowskie, located in N Poland. It focusses on its sedimentological and chronological framework with examples of centennial and millennial scale climate oscillations and climate trends, respectively. It will further give insights in the interdisciplinary research approach of ICLEA (Virtual Institute of Integrated Climate and Landscape Evolution Analyses).  [mehr]

AncientDNA and the Americas: current projects and challenges in anthropologicalresearch

Destinguished Lectureres Seminar Series

DLCE Cultural Evolution Symposium

DLCE Workshop

Master Students Course

Vortrag von Frank Maixner

Multi-omics study of the Iceman´s stomach content shows main components of a Copper Age meal: fat, wild meat and cereals [mehr]

MPI-SHH Institutsseminar

Insights into human evolutionary biology from ancient DNA [mehr]

Talk by Fredrik Hallgren

About the archaeological context of Stone Age aDNA samples from Sweden:  Motala (c. 7700 cal BP), Kvärlöv (c. 5700-5400 cal BP) and Ölsund (c. 4300 cal BP) [mehr]

Vortrag von Eugenio Bortolini

DLCE Talk
Isolation by distance, demic diffusion, and cultural diffusion in the genomic era: Investigating the distribution of traditional folktales across Eurasia [mehr]

Myles Jackson "The Genealogy of a Gene: Patents, HIV/AIDS, and Race"

Distinguished Lecturer Seminar Series
Myles Jackson uses the story of the CCR5 gene to investigate the interrelationships among science, technology, and society. [mehr]

Vortrag von Silvia Ferrara

Vortrag von Henny Piezonka

„Herding Fishers, Hunting Potters - Neolithic cultural traits in Northern Eurasia" [mehr]

DAG - Workshop

BioArCaucasus - Meeting [mehr]

Survival and utility of ancient proteins in archaeology

Distinguished Lecturer Seminar Series

DAG Vortrag von Ashley Scott

Research in Mongolian dairying [mehr]

Mark Aldenderfer - The Prehistory of the Tibetan Plateau and the High Himalayas

Distinguished Lecturer Seminar Series

Nick Patterson - The Ancient Populations forming the Genetics of Modern India

Distinguished Lecturer Seminar Series

DAG Lab Seminar und Meetings

DAG Lab Seminar

DAG Lab Seminar und Meetings

DAG Lab Seminar

Using isotopes to track past human migrations

Distinguished Lecturer Seminar Series
Isotope analysis of human and animal bone and teeth can be used to determine their geographic origin, and how they moved over their lifetimes. In contrast to DNA and linguistic analysis, which can determine origins and migrations over generations, isotope analysis has the promise of being able to identify movements of individuals at different points of their lives. The method has it’s limitations, but can be used to address both larger archaeological questions of past population movements and also provide a glimpse into the life histories of individual skeletons. In this talk I will introduce the methods we use for this analysis (strontium and sulphur isotope analysis) and then provide examples of how we have applied this method to look for human migration and movements in a variety of current and unpublished case studies. These will include studies of Neanderthal mobility, identifying possible pilgrims at the Roman and Byzantine world heritage sites of Hierapolis and Ephesus in Turkey, and the results of a large-scale isotopic study of Minoans and Mycenaeans in Bronze age Greece. [mehr]

DAG Lab Seminar und Meetings

DAG Lab Seminar

Vortrag von Gary Lupyan

DLCE Talk
The role of adaptation in explaining linguistic diversity [mehr]

DAG Lab Seminar und Meetings

DAG Lab Seminar
Schüler/innen ab der 8. Klasse aufgepasst: Entdeckt, wie spannend die Menschheitsgeschichte ist! Wissenschaftlerinnen und Wissenschaftler am Max-Planck-Institut für Menschheitsgeschichte laden euch ein, mehr über einzelne Forschungsfragen zu erfahren und mit ihnen kleine Aufgaben und Tests zu ganz unterschiedlichen Fragestellungen durchzuführen. [mehr]

DAG Lab Seminar und Meetings

DAG Lab Seminar
Weitere Informationen finden Sie auf unserer englischsprachigen Webseite. [mehr]

DAG Lab Seminar und Meetings

DAG Lab Seminar

DAG Lab Seminar und Meetings

DAG Lab Seminar

Thomas Higham: Jüngste Fortschritte bei der Datierung des Paläolithikums und ihre Implikationen

Distinguished Lecturer Seminar Series

DAG Lab Seminar und Meetings

DAG Lab Seminar

Vortrag von Alexander Francis-Ratté

Eurasia3angle talk
  • Datum: 24.05.2017
  • Uhrzeit: 14:00 - 15:30
  • Vortragende(r): Alexander Francis-Ratté
  • Alexander (or Alex) Francis-Ratté is Assistant Professor of Asian Studies at Furman University in the state of South Carolina. He received his Ph.D. from The Ohio State University in 2016, and wrote his doctoral dissertation with Dr. J. Marshall Unger on a reassessment of the Japano-Koreanic reconstruction.
  • Ort: MPI SHH Jena
  • Raum: Villa V14
  • Gastgeber: Eurasia3angle
  • Kontakt: schueck@shh.mpg.de
Recent advances in the proto-Korean-Japanese reconstruction and some implications for Transeurasian [mehr]

DAG Lab Seminar und Meetings

DAG Lab Seminar

DAG Lab Seminar und Meetings

DAG Lab Seminar

DAG Lab Seminar und Meetings

DAG Lab Seminar

15. jährlicher Softwareworkshop der Max-Planck Gesellschaft

MPG Softwareworkshop

DAG Lab Seminar und Meetings

DAG Lab Seminar

DAG Lab Seminar und Meetings

DAG Lab Seminar

Early Hominin Diet: Where are we and where do we go from here? (Frühe menschliche Ernährung: Aktueller Forschungstand und nächste Schritte)

Distinguished Lecturer Seminar Series

Biologische Marker des Wandels in Südostasien und der Inselwelt Südostasiens

DA Workshop
Despite widespread acknowledgement that Island Southeast Asia (ISEA) has been an important link between Southeast Asia and the Southern Hemisphere for at least 50,000 years, little is known about interactions both within ISEA and with Mainland Southeast Asia to the north, and Sahul (Australia and New Guinea) to the south. Due to the tropical climate of the Southeast and Island Southeast Asia region, organic materials are rarely preserved and traditional archaeological techniques have not been particularly successful when it comes to understanding how people interacted with and within their environments. In this workshop we will be discussing novel and innovative methodologies and ideas that might be applied to the region, while highlighting recent findings that have already employed some of these techniques such as genomic, isotopic, lipid, microparticle and proteomic analyses. [mehr]

DAG Lab Seminar und Meetings

DAG Lab Seminar

DAG Lab Seminar und Meetings

DAG Lab Seminar

Vortrag von Beverly Strassmann

Distinguished Lecturer Seminar Series
Religious Control of Sexuality Increases Paternity Certainty: A longterm study of the Dogon of Mali [mehr]

DAG Lab Seminar und Meetings

DAG Lab Seminar

DAG Lab Seminar und Meetings

DAG Lab Seminar

DAG Lab Seminar und Meetings

DAG Lab Seminar

DAG Lab Seminar und Meetings

DAG Lab Seminar

DAG Lab Seminar und Meetings

DAG Lab Seminar

Vortrag von Hideaki Kanzawa-Kiriyama

Eurasia3angle talk
Genomic insights into the relationship between ancient Japanese and modern East Eurasians [mehr]

Millet Agriculture, Material Culture and Organic Residue Analysis

Distinguished Lecturer Seminar Series

DAG Lab Seminar und Meetings

DAG Lab Seminar

DAG Lab Seminar und Meetings

DAG Lab Seminar

Green Arabia Drilling

DA Workshop
Interdisziplinäre Forschung zu Klima- und Umweltveränderungen und ihr Einfluss auf die Verbreitung des Menschen im Quartär auf der Basis von Sedimentkernen aus dem Jubbah-Paläosee (Saudi-Arabien). Organisatoren: Dr. Florian Ott und Prof. Michael Petraglia. [mehr]

DAG Lab Seminar und Meetings

DAG Lab Seminar

Vortrag von Andreea Calude

DLCE Talk
What loanwords can tell us about language change – a case-study of Māori Loanwords in New Zealand English [mehr]

DAG Lab Seminar und Meetings

DAG Lab Seminar

Vortrag von Thom Scott-Phillips

The Mint Talk
Expression unleashed [mehr]

Vortrag von Iain Mathieson

Distinguished Lecturer Seminar Series
"The first interactions between Hunter-Gatherers and Farmers in Southeastern Europe" [mehr]

DAG Lab Seminar und Meetings

DAG Lab Seminar

DAG Lab Seminar und Meetings

DAG Lab Seminar

Vortrag von Sander Adelaar

The settlement of Madagascar by speakers of Austronesian and Bantu languages A progress report [mehr]

DAG Lab Seminar und Meetings

DAG Lab Seminar

DAG Lab Seminar und Meetings

DAG Lab Seminar

DAG Lab Seminar und Meetings

DAG Lab Seminar

DAG Lab Seminar und Meetings

DAG Lab Seminar

Epizoötic Challenges to Pastoral Expansion in Africa: Minding the “Bovine Gap”

Distinguished Lecturer Seminar Series
In two spatiotemporally separate cases in sub-Saharan Africa, small domestic livestock appear around 1000 years before cattle. South of Lake Turkana (eastern Africa), sparse domestic caprines and Lake Turkana ceramics of the Nderit tradition appear c. 4000 BP, nearly 1000 years before the first evidence for cattle. In southern Africa, sheep date to nearly 2200 BP, centuries before evidence for cattle. In 2000, I proposed that African savannas presented novel disease challenges to cattle pastoralism. Sleeping sickness (trypanosomiasis) is a continental-scale risk in brushy areas, but wildebeest-borne malignant catarrhal fever (WD-MCF) and East Coast Fever (ECF) attack cattle in the grasslands that they favor. WD-MCF has a nearly 100% death rate in exposed cattle, and ECF, probably originating with an earlier transmission of Theileria parva from African buffalo to cattle, kills 20% of each cattle cohort. Infection risk is heightened by the three species’ overlapping forage and water requirements. Pastoralists may have exacerbated cattle herds’ vulnerability to infection through anthropogenic savanna expansion. This hypothesis could be falsified by finds of cattle dating to the “Bovine Gap” timespans in either region. As a test, I reviewed 2000-2015 East African archaeofaunal evidence, plus fauna from a stratified site south of Nairobi, GvJm44, yielding Nderit pottery in its lower level. I report these results and discuss how infectious disease genomics might offer finer resolution of routes and times of initial transmission of several wild ungulate diseases to livestock. [mehr]

Eastern Africa Workshop

DA Workshop
Weiter Informationen finden Sie auf der englischen Version unserer Webseite. [mehr]

DAG Lab Seminar und Meetings

DAG Lab Seminar

Madagascar Workshop

DA Workshop

Comoros Workshop

DA Workshop

Department of Archaeology Special Seminar by Prof. Henry Wright

Early Hunter-Gatherers in the Far North of Madagascar A summary of the unexpected discovery of Middle Holocene foragers using microlithic stone technologies, and of the research of the late Robert Dewar and myself on these people who impacted the natural environments of Madagascar long before the Austronesian arrival with rice, taro, cattle and iron and ceramic technologies. [mehr]

Mini-Bayesian School for Transeurasian Linguists

DAG Lab Seminar und Meetings

DAG Lab Seminar
Exploring the long durée of Central Asian prehistory through cross-disciplinary approaches and methodologies. [mehr]

Vortrag von Sarah Martini

"Quantitative Geoarchaeology of Multi-Layered Settlement Sites: Potentials and Limitations. A Case Study from the Neolithic Visoko Basin, Bosnia." [mehr]

DAG Lab Seminar und Meetings

DAG Lab Seminar

Vortrag von Dr. Saman Heydari-Guran

"The struggle Zone": Tracking the Neanderthals and modern humans contacts in the west-central Zagros Mountains [mehr]

Vortrag von Dr. Elham Ghasidian

Diversity of culture among the Upper Paleolithic hunter-gatherers in the Zagros Mountains [mehr]

DAG Lab Seminar und Meetings

DAG Lab Seminar

Vortrag von Elena Sergusheva

DLCE Talk
Archaeology and Archaeobotany in the Primorye Region, south of the Russian Far East [mehr]

DAG Lab Seminar und Meetings

DAG Lab Seminar

DAG Lab Seminar und Meetings

DAG Lab Seminar

DAG Lab Seminar und Meetings

DAG Lab Seminar

Ökologische Chance, Evolution und die Entstehung der Flohpest (English title: "Ecological opportunity, evolution, and the emergence of flea-borne plague")

Distinguished Lecturer Seminar Series

Crossroads: Multidisciplinary investigations of South Asia's past

DA Workshop
South Asia has long been the site of incredible environmental, cultural, genetic, and linguistic diversity, with the hyper-diversity of the region being surpassed only by that of the continent of Africa. Moreover, owing to its geographical location, it serves as a “crossroads” between Europe, Africa and East, West and Southeast Asia throughout human history. With this workshop, we aim to bring together different specialists working in the region to share results and facilitate an inter-disciplinary approach to uncovering the past of this region. Presenters will draw on linguistic, genetic, bio-molecular and macroscopic lines of evidence to elucidate changes in diet, demography, and ecology across major cultural transitions in the region. [mehr]

DAG Lab Seminar und Meetings

DAG Lab Seminar

Vortrag von Kilu von Price

DLCE Talk
The role of corpus data in comparative researchCase studies from the MelaTAMP project [mehr]

DAG Lab Seminar und Meetings

DAG Lab Seminar

DAG Lab Seminar und Meetings

DAG Lab Seminar

Cross-Departmental Work-in-Progress Seminar

Our inaugural monthly "Work-in-Progress" seminar featuring: Paul Heggarty (DLCE), Monica Tromp (DA) and Cosimo Posth (DAG) [mehr]

Reconstructing genetic history of Northern populations in China

DLCE Talk
Reconstructing genetic history of Northern populations in China [mehr]

Using the isotopic signature of people to understand the diets of black bears

DA Vortrag

Cross-Departmental Work-in-Progress Seminar

The second "Work-in-Progress" seminar featuring: Richard Hagan (DAG), Hiba Babiker (DLCE), and Patrick Roberts (DA). [mehr]
Hunter-gatherer-fishers with pots. Organic residue analysis and the radiocarbon chronology of pottery dispersal in eastern Europe (Jäger-Sammler-Fischer mit Töpfen. Die Analyse organischer Rückstände und die Radioncarbon Chronologie der Verbreitung von Töpferwaren in Osteuropa) [mehr]

New radiocarbon evidence for burial practices at Burkhan Tolgoi during the Xiongnu period

DA Vortrag
Lexical semantic maps in diachrony and synchrony: theoretical, methodological, and representational issues [mehr]

Workshop: International Applications of Archaeological Science

DA Workshop
The Department of Archaeology at the Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History is hosting an intensive, invitation-only, one-week workshop for early career researchers from all over the world, from 13-17 March 2018. [mehr]

Distinguished Lecture by Dr. María Martinón-Torres - "The Evolution of Homo sapiens: Asian Perspectives"

Distinguished Lecturer Seminar Series
Recent discoveries have prompted the necessity to reconsider the weight that Asia may have played in the evolution of modern humans. Simple and linear models to explain the origin and dispersals of H. sapiens seem to be progressively outdated by the new paleoanthropological and archaeological sites. Here I present a general overview of some key fossil samples that place modern humans outside Africa close to 100,000 years ago, increasing the time of overlap with other archaic hominins and posing new questions about the time and pattern of H. sapiens expansion into Asia. Hosts: Michael Petraglia and Nicole Boivin, Department of Archaeology [mehr]

Cultural Innovations in the Middle and Later Stone Age of East Africa: Panga Ya Saïdi, Kenya - Preliminary results

DA Vortrag

Patterns of Disease in the Roman Empire (Krankheitsbilder im Römischen Reich)

Distinguished Lecturer Seminar Series

Cross-Departmental Work-in-Progress Seminar

Vortragende beim dritten abteilungsübergreifenden "Work-in-Progress"-Seminar sind: Felix Key (DAG), Joseph Watts (DLCE), und Robert Spengler (DA). [mehr]

Paleodiet of the Russian Far East: results, problems, and perspectives

DA Vortrag

Longer wordlists for long-range linguistic comparison: principles, problems, perspectives.

DLCE Talk
Longer wordlists for long-range linguistic comparison: principles, problems, perspectives. [mehr]
The reconstruction of the phonology of Old Chinese has greatly advanced during the last decades. As a result, reconstruction systems which were proposed independently by different scholars, such as Baxter and Sagart (2014), Starostin (1989), and Zhèngzhāng (2003) resemble each other much more than earlier reconstructions (Wáng 1980, Li 1971, Karlgren 1957). With the increased consensus among scholars, Old Chinese has also begun to resemble Tibete-Burman languages much closer, which has lead to an increased research and debate about the position of Chinese within the Sino-Tibetan (or Trans-Himalayan) language family (Behr 1999, Jacques 2015). The goal of the workshop is to bring together experts on Sino-Tibetan linguistics, Ancient Chinese, Old Chinese reconstruction, and Chinese paleography to discuss future directions of research on Old Chinese phonology in the broader context of the genetic affiliation of Chinese as well as the history of the writing system with a special focus on newly excavated documents. [mehr]
Organisatoren: Prof. Dr. Johannes Krause & Dr. Christina Warinner [mehr]

Heirloom Microbes Project: Proteomics Workshop

Heirloom Microbes Workshop
Proteomics Workshop - May 7-18 Participants: Linyuan Fan, Freddi Scheib, Rodrigo Barquera, Susanna Sabin, Karen Giffin, Betsy Nelson Instructors: Dr. Christina Warinner, Zandra Fagernäs, Richard Hagan, Ashley Scott, Shevan Wilkin, Maddy Bleasdale [mehr]

DAG Talk: New statistical methods for ancient genomic analysis

DAG Vortrag

Vortrag von Ludovic Orlando: Tracking Six Millenia of Horse Selection, Admixture and Management with Complete Genome Time-Series

Distinguished Lecturer Seminar Series

Cross-Departmental Work-in-Progress Seminar

Vortragende beim nächsten abteilungsübergreifenden "Work-in-Progress"-Seminar sind: Betsy Nelson (DAG), Anne-Marie Fehn (DLCE) und Steven Goldstein (DA). [mehr]

Influence of climate changes and human activities on late Quaternary red deer (Cervus elaphus) populations

DLCE Vortrag

Vortrag von Guillaume Scholz: From symbolic ultrametrics to three-way maps

DLCE Vortrag

Microbial Diversity of Traditional Dairy Ecologies

Heirloom Microbes Workshop

Abteilungsübergreifendes Work-in-Progress Seminar

Vortragende beim nächsten "Work-in-Progress"-Seminar sind: Marieke van de Loosdrecht (DAG), Juliane Bräuer (DLCE) and Jessica Hendy (DA). [mehr]

Distinguished Lecture von Joe Salmons: "When People Move, Languages Change: The Origins of German, and of its Speakers"

Distinguished Lecturer Seminar Series
One of many ways in which language can inform us of the past is through an exploration of which kinds of structural changes in language correlate with which kinds of population movements and contacts. This talk presents case studies through the long history and dialectal diversity of German, from prehistory to the present-day. Defining stages include the Migration Period and the mediaeval expansion into what is now eastern Germany, which was once Slavic-speaking. Different linguistic effects can help diagnose whether there was an abrupt shift from one language to another, or an extended period of contact and broad bilingualism, or where contacts were among speakers of closely related dialects, rather than clearly distinct languages. [mehr]
Mit dem MINT-Festival Jena wird vom 11.-13.09.2018 ein Wissenschaftsfestival rund um die MINT-Disziplinen Mathematik, Informatik, Naturwissenschaften und Technik stattfinden. Geboten wird ein buntes Programm, bestehend aus spannenden Vorträgen, Mitmach-Experimenten, Workshops, Angeboten zur Berufsorientierung und einem Schülerwettbewerb. Aufregend wird es ebenfalls auf dem Vorplatz des Universitätscampus: hier erwartet die Besucher ein unterhaltsames Programm, das naturwissenschaftliche Phänomene hautnah miterleben lässt!Das Max-Planck-Institut für Menschheitsgeschichte wird am dritten Tag teilnehmen. [mehr]

Kneipen-Quiz im Jenaer Paradies

Max-Planck-Tag am 14. September 2018
Anlässlich des bundesweiten Max-Planck-Tages am Freitag, den 14. September, veranstalten die drei Jenaer Max-Planck-Institute einen Flashmob am Holzmarkt in der Innenstadt und ein Kneipenquiz im Paradiescafé. (Einlass 19:00 Uhr, Beginn: 20:00 Uhr) Jede/r ist herzlich eingeladen! Die Teilnahme ist kostenlos. Anmeldungen bitte als Team (4 bis 6 Personen) mit Teamnamen an: quiz@ice.mpg.de. [mehr]

Isotope Research in Archaeology

DA Workshop
The Stable Isotope Research Group of the Department of Archaeology is hosting a one-day invited workshop on Monday 17th of September that will focus on recent developments and future avenues of isotope research in archaeology. [mehr]
Das 8. Internationale Symposium für Biomolekulare Archäologie (ISBA) fand vom 18. bis 21. September 2018 an der Friedrich-Schiller-Universität Jena statt. Sie wurde von Mitgliedern der Abteilung für Archäogenetik des Max-Planck-Instituts für Menschheitsgeschichte organisiert. [mehr]

Vortrag von Manja Marz: "Tools Virus Bioinformatics"

Distinguished Lecture von Stephen Shennan: "The First Farmers of Europe: An Evolutionary Perspective"

Distinguished Lecturer Seminar Series

Vortrag von Shai Carmi: "Population-genetic analyses of ancient DNA from the Bronze Age Levant"

Abteilungsübergreifendes Work-in-Progress Seminar

Die nächste Runde unseres ‘Work-in-Progress-Seminars’ : Ricardo Fernandes (DA), Robert Forkel (DLCE), Susanna Sabin (DAG) [mehr]
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