Monday, November 5, 2012
Paleoanthropologists Lee Berger in Dallas
Professor Lee Berger, paleoanthropologist from the University of Witwatersrand, South Africa will be joining us at the Perot Museum next week on his book tour! He'll be speaking to school groups at the Perot Museum of Nature and Science during the day on Monday, November 12th, and will be giving a talk that open to the public that evening at St. Marks School of Texas. Tickets are free but be sure to RSVP here!
Monday, April 23, 2012
Solar-Powered Q&A
While in the field at Gobero, we were fortunate enough to be able to communicate via email (using at satellite phone connection and a solar-charged computer) with schools in both Dallas and Chicago to answer question about the fieldwork from students. Here's a write-up from the Perot Museum of Nature and Science newsletter about our Q & A with Laureate Preparatory School in Dallas.
Monday, January 23, 2012
Sandscapes
Here's my entry reposted from the Gobero team's expedition blog, which can be found here.
As our Land Rovers rolled to a halt when we reached Gobero and we hopped out to scope out the site, our attention turned immediately to the artifacts and faunal remains visible on the surface of the sand in all directions. You always have to watch your step when walking to dodge the bones of hippopotamus, crocodile, nile perch, and even a species of fresh water blowfish that once lived here.
While most of the excavations here take place on the raised ‘hills,’ (technically paleodunes that once formed a peninsula in the surrounding Lake Gobero), the lower-elevation areas around the ‘hills’ were once at the bottom of this long-since-dry lake. The faunal remains here provide abundant evidence about which animals lived in this lake and what the ecosystem was like thousands of years ago when the Kiffians and, subsequently the Tenereans inhabited the site.
Over time, the climate at Gobero has dessicated and it is now as dry and sandy as you’d imagine the Sahara to be. But the area is by no means devoid of life. Since arriving, we have seen fennecs (a desert fox a little smaller than a jackal (the word for this animal in Tamashek, a language spoken here and in several neighboring countries, is ezzuguzz); pied crows (arghulga-wan-tuggazie); red spotted lizards (tashamey); jerboa (edaoui); dreaded wind scorpians (aghardum); ants; and beetles.
Plants that live here need tough defenses to protect themselves. Acacia trees (attas), for example, have sharp thorns to protect its leaves from browsers like camel and gazelle. You never want to leave your tent barefooted because you’re bound to encounter their sharp thorns mixed in with the sand – ouch! In addition to the ones I mentioned, there is a multitude of animals and plants here, each with its own adaptations to the desert ecosystem in which they live.
It’s been an extraordinary experience to be part of a vibrant desert ecosystem while piecing together an ancient world.
As our Land Rovers rolled to a halt when we reached Gobero and we hopped out to scope out the site, our attention turned immediately to the artifacts and faunal remains visible on the surface of the sand in all directions. You always have to watch your step when walking to dodge the bones of hippopotamus, crocodile, nile perch, and even a species of fresh water blowfish that once lived here.
A red-spotted lizard blends in with the sand. Photo by H. Moots.
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While most of the excavations here take place on the raised ‘hills,’ (technically paleodunes that once formed a peninsula in the surrounding Lake Gobero), the lower-elevation areas around the ‘hills’ were once at the bottom of this long-since-dry lake. The faunal remains here provide abundant evidence about which animals lived in this lake and what the ecosystem was like thousands of years ago when the Kiffians and, subsequently the Tenereans inhabited the site.
Over time, the climate at Gobero has dessicated and it is now as dry and sandy as you’d imagine the Sahara to be. But the area is by no means devoid of life. Since arriving, we have seen fennecs (a desert fox a little smaller than a jackal (the word for this animal in Tamashek, a language spoken here and in several neighboring countries, is ezzuguzz); pied crows (arghulga-wan-tuggazie); red spotted lizards (tashamey); jerboa (edaoui); dreaded wind scorpians (aghardum); ants; and beetles.
Plants that live here need tough defenses to protect themselves. Acacia trees (attas), for example, have sharp thorns to protect its leaves from browsers like camel and gazelle. You never want to leave your tent barefooted because you’re bound to encounter their sharp thorns mixed in with the sand – ouch! In addition to the ones I mentioned, there is a multitude of animals and plants here, each with its own adaptations to the desert ecosystem in which they live.
It’s been an extraordinary experience to be part of a vibrant desert ecosystem while piecing together an ancient world.
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