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Archaeological dig reveals participants in California s Gold Rush dined on salted Atlantic cod

Archaeological dig reveals participants in California s Gold Rush dined on salted Atlantic cod

Presidential Professor Emeritus of Anthropology Philip Bock dies

Presidential Professor Emeritus of Anthropology Philip Bock dies
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UL s Caffery Award winner researches cultures shaped by external forces

UL s Caffery Award winner researches cultures shaped by external forces (Photo at left courtesy of René Champagne. Photo at right is courtesy of Special Collections at UL Lafayette). René Champagne is the winner of this year’s Jefferson Caffery Research Award at the university of Louisiana at Lafayette. The prize’s namesake is at right. and last updated 2021-05-05 15:00:29-04 By UL Lafayette Office of Communications and Marketing René Champagne’s interest in how cultures adapt to environmental or political changes earned him this year’s Jefferson Caffery Research Award at the University of Louisiana at Lafayette.

Monthly Review | Digging up a review of Ian Angus Facing the Anthropocene, from the Journal of Anthropological Research

Journal of Anthropological Research, Spring 2018 “…..The book is set up in three parts. The first, ‘A No-Analog State,’ outlines the argument that what we are seeing today is a ‘new and unprecedented state’ on Earth. Angus’s account of the Anthropocene clearly shows that its recognition is a synthesis of decades of work and data compiled by a multitude of scientists across the world. He continues with a discussion of ‘The Great Acceleration,’ the point in the mid-twentieth century when humanity’s impact on earth’s systems dramatically in- creased. Next comes the concept of “tipping points,” which is the idea that climate change may be gradual for an extended period of time but reaches certain points where rapid, chaotic changes occur. Whereas the Holocene has been relatively stable, as Angus points out, the 2.6-million-year Pleistocene epoch was extremely variable (p. 68). His point here is that instability may be the norm for our global climate.

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