Raum: Villa V14

MPG Software Workshop 2015 - Schwerpunkt Lizenzmanagement

Titel der Vortragsreihe

PHD Workshop Abteilung Archäogenetik

Treffen des IT-Sprecherkreises der MPG

IT-Sprecherkreistreffen der MPG

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 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]

Doktoranden Workshop DAG

Genome Analysis Workshop (PoPGen)

DAG Workshop

Genome Analysis Workshop (PoPGen)

DAG Workshop

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 Päivi Onkamo

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

AncientDNA and the Americas: current projects and challenges in anthropologicalresearch

Destinguished Lectureres Seminar Series

DLCE Cultural Evolution Symposium

DLCE Workshop

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]

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

DAG Lab Seminar und Meetings

DAG Lab Seminar

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

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

DAG Lab Seminar und Meetings

DAG Lab Seminar

DAG Lab Seminar und Meetings

DAG Lab Seminar

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

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]

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]

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

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

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]

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]

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

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]

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]

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]

Distinguished Lecture by Tim Cleland: "Bone Proteomics and Paleoproteomics: Method Development and Detecting Diagenesis"

Distinguished Lecturer Seminar Series

Vortrag von Arthur Kocher: "Biodiversity and infectious diseases: impact of human activities on zoonotic leishmaniasis epidemiology in Amazonia"

Distinguished Lecture von Prof. Amy Bogaard: "Recent Explorations of Early Urban Agroecology in Western Eurasia"

Distinguished Lecturer Seminar Series
Organized by Ayushi Nayak [mehr]

Abteilungsübergreifendes Work-in-Progress Seminar

Die nächste Runde unseres ‘Work-in-Progress-Seminars’: James Fellows Yates (DAG), Chiara Barbieri (DLCE) and Thomas Larsen (DA). [mehr]

Distinguished Lecture von Monica H. Green: "From Africa to Tibet: Telling Plague’s Story from the Periphery to the Center"

Distinguished Lecturer Seminar Series
Organisiert von Cosimo Posth [mehr]

Distinguished Lecture von Alicia Sanchez-Mazas: "The intriguing evolution of HLA genes in human populations"

Distinguished Lecturer Seminar Series
Organisiert von Johannes Krause [mehr]

Abteilungsübergreifendes Work-in-Progress Seminar

Die nächste Runde unseres ‘Work-in-Progress-Seminars’: Zandra Fragernäs (DAG), Adam Izdebski (ByzRes), Yunfan Lai (CALC) [mehr]

Historical Linguistics Workshop

DLCE Workshop
Organisiert von Russell Gray. [mehr]
Ancient communities shaped everyday existence as they were constructed to meet the changing needs of those living together. Most communities in the north-eastern Andean highlands of Peru, even into the later prehistoric periods, remained disperse and of small to moderate size, yet Kuelap (AD 800 – 1470) is one of the largest in this region. On top of the monumental stone platform are the remains of over 420 house structures, several public plazas, and the unique Tintero (Major Temple). Yet, no less than 9 different types of mortuary patterns have been identified at the site, which may suggest that the burial population represented diverse beliefs, social identities, or origins. Was Kuelap more than just a single community, but a collective of regional ethnic groups? This presentation explores the new and original analysis of the bioarchaeological data from the distinct mortuary contexts excavated across the site. I describe and define the skeletal patterns of health indicators, diet, disease, and lifestyle from the over 600 individuals excavated at the site. Figuring out who was buried at Kuelap might help us understand who was living at Kuelap and the purpose of this enigmatic site. [mehr]

Transeurasian millets and beans, language and genes

Eurasia3angle Conference
Interdisziplinäre Konferenz im "Tandemstil". Wir haben 6 Genetiker, 6 Linguisten und 6 Archäologen unter der Bedingung eingeladen, dass sie mit mindestens einem Co-Moderator aus einer anderen Disziplin zusammenarbeiten. Dadurch werden alle Präsentationen wirklich "interdisziplinär", d.h. sie integrieren verschiedene Disziplinen in einem einzigen Beitrag. [mehr]

Abteilungsübergreifendes Work-in-Progress Seminar

Die nächste Runde unseres ‘Work-in-Progress-Seminars’: Alicia Ventresca Miller (DA), Tao Li (Eurasia3Angle), Ning Chao (Eurasia3Angle) [mehr]

Distinguished Lecture von Katerina Harvati-Papatheodorou: "Neanderthals and early modern humans: New results from the lab and field"

Distinguished Lecturer Seminar Series
Organisiert von Alicia Ventresca Miller. [mehr]

Resilience, environmental change and society: Perspectives from History and Prehistory

Climate Change and History Research Initiative 2019 Annual Colloquium
Jointly organized by Princeton University and the Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History (Palaeo-Science and History (PS&H) Independent Research Group (formerly ByzRes) and the Department of Archaeology). [mehr]

Distinguished Lecture von Alison Beach: "Reading the Remnants: Religious Women and the Material Turn in Medieval History"

Distinguished Lecturer Seminar Series
Remnants of material culture – from excavated monastery walls to fragments of parchment books discovered in archives – are opening new windows into the everyday lives of medieval religious women. Focusing on the intersection between text and object, this lecture will present evidence for the intellectual and artistic contributions of women to the rapidly changing society of twelfth-century Europe. [mehr]
As the world population approaches 8 billion and we are faced with climatic and political uncertainty, global food security is becoming a growing concern. However, humans throughout history and prehistory have faced uncertainty in their food production systems, often in response to political changes, social turmoil, climate change, and/or technological shifts. There are many historical examples of changing political regimes directly effecting which crops farmers plant or the way that crops are cultivated, harvested, and processed. This workshop will discuss reconstructions of ancient food security strategies as a tool to develop practices for future economic sustainability. The study of ancient food security allows us to examine this issue at a chronological scale inaccessible to modern research, and in diverse social, cultural, and political contexts. We are particularly interested in exploring the ecological and social consequences of the transition from traditional agricultural systems, focused on low investment crops to systems dependent on crops of high yield, but high labor and resource input. Often, the transition to high input crops is fueled by cash cropping and ties people into unstable market economies. These economic transitions commonly reshape economic strategies from recruitment of diverse resources to intensification of a narrow suite of foods. These historical food transitions parallel, in many ways, modern shifts from small-scale family farms to large agrobusiness ventures. In this workshop, we seek to develop methods to document if and how people maintained food production under rapidly changing political, ecological, and economic systems. [mehr]

Distinguished Lecture von Prof. Fiona Marshall: "Ancient herders enriched and restructured African grasslands"

Distinguished Lecturer Seminar Series

New Frontiers in Anthropocene Archaeology

DA Workshop

Distinguished Lecture by Dr. Juliane Kaminski: "Through a dog's eyes: Domestication and the dog-human bond"

Distinguished Lecturer Seminar Series

Distinguished Lecture by Felicity Meakins: "Language diversification through the lens of rapid intergenerational change?"

Distinguished Lecturer Seminar Series

Cross-Departmental Work-in-Progress Seminar

Our next "Work-in-Progress" seminar featuring:Mark Hudson (Eurasia3Angle): Bronze Age mobilities in Japan: coincidence or connection? He Yu (DAG): Population Dynamics of Siberia revealed by the Lake Baikal region Ian Joo (Eurasia3Angle): The etymology of Middle Korean livestock vocabularyEach speaker presents her/his research within 10 minutes (in English) followed by 5 minutes of discussion.

Cross-Departmental Work-in-Progress Seminar

Our next "Work-in-Progress" seminar featuring: Joscha Gretzinger (Department of Archaeogenetics): The Anglo-Saxon Migration; Tiago Tresoldi (Department of Linguistic and Cultural Evolution): Applying Bayesian Phylogenetic Methods to the Stemmatics of the 'Divine Comedy'; Victor Caetano Andrade (The Department of Archaeology): The Amazon tree project.Each speaker presents her/his research within 10 minutes (in English) followed by 5 minutes of discussion.

Distinguished Lecture von Salima Ikram: "Who Were the Ancient Egyptians, and Where Did They All Come From?"

Distinguished Lecturer Seminar Series

Die „exakten Wissenschaften“ und die Mittelalterforschung - Round Table

Gemeinsame Veranstaltung des MPI für Menschheitsgeschichte und des Historischen Instituts der Universität Jena
Die unabhängige Forschungsgruppe Paleo-Science & History ("Paläowissenschaften & Geschichte") organisiert (mit Unterstützung der Abteilung für Archäogenetik) einen gemeinsamen Workshop mit dem Historischen Institut der Universität Jena (FSU) über die Anwendung wissenschaftlicher Methoden zur Erforschung des Mittelalters. [mehr]

Abteilungsübergreifendes Work-in-Progress Seminar

Vortragende des nächsten "Work-in-Progress" seminars am 23. Januar sind: Aida Andrades Valtueña (Abteilung für Archäogenetik): Analysing plague's genomic and functional evolution in the light of (pre-)history und Robert Tegethoff (Abteilung für Sprach- und Kulturevolution): Tracing the Indo-Iranian split in the Greater Hindu Kush. Jeder Vortrag wird etwa 10 Minuten dauern mit anschließender kurzer Diskussion. Veranstaltungssprache ist Englisch.

Lecture by Svetlana Shnaider: Epipaleolithic of Central Asia

DAG Talk

Reproducible Research and Data Management workshop

Cross Departmental Workshop

Distinguished Lecture by Roberto Risch: "From cooperative affluent to state societies: the social and political dynamics of southern Iberia between 3300-1550 BCE"

Distinguished Lecturer Seminar Series

Distinguished Lecture by Robin Dennell: "The Human Colonisation of East Asia"

Distinguished Lecturer Seminar Series

Parallel Universes of Cultural Dynamics

Distinguished Lecture by Ryan Mckay: "Belief Formation in a Post-Truth World"

Distinguished Lecturer Seminar Series

Cultural Dynamics of Human-Environmental Interaction in Tropical Highland Pang Mapha, Northwest Thailand

Weitere Informationen erhalten Sie auf Englisch [mehr]

Human evolution of, in and beyond the Anthropocene

Weitere Informationen finden Sie auf unser englischsprachigen Webseite. [mehr]

Long-term sea-level commitment and reversibility of ice loss from Antarctica

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