A pan-tropical forum and research network

Skip to content
Menu
  • About
  • Blog
  • Research News
  • The Pantropica Podcasts
  • Talks & Events
  • PANTROPOCENE
  • Affiliated Projects
  • The Team

Tag: research talks

New podcast coming July 2021!
Posts

New podcast coming July 2021!

Posted on January 19, 2021January 19, 2021 by Rebecca Hamilton

The ‘Pantropica Podcasts’ provides a space for early career researchers from across the globe to present their work in tropical palaeoecology, archaeology, history, policy and…

Recent Posts

  • New podcast coming July 2021!
    By Rebecca Hamilton
    In Posts, The Pantropica Podcasts
    January 19, 2021
  • Multidisciplinary research reveals prehistoric human management of a resilient tropical forest-mangrove landscape in Vietnam
    By Rachael Holmes
    In Posts, Research News
    July 28, 2020
  • From the First Farmers to the Spanish Empire: 4000 years of animal and plant introductions to the Philippine Archipelago
    By Noel Amano
    In Posts, Research News
    July 17, 2020

PantropicaFollow

Pantropica
Retweet on TwitterPantropica Retweeted
finestone_emmaEmma Finestone@finestone_emma·
4 Mar

Check out our newest episode of #ArchaeoChats with guest Dr. Emmanuel Ndiema, Head of Archaeology at the National Museums of Kenya in Nairobi @museumsofkenya. I was especially excited for this episode and @endiema did not disappoint! Link to watch below:

https://youtu.be/2QGVXApSNVc

Reply on Twitter 1367415309037142016Retweet on Twitter 136741530903714201616Like on Twitter 136741530903714201632Twitter 1367415309037142016
Retweet on TwitterPantropica Retweeted
RobertPatalanoRobert Patalano@RobertPatalano·
23h

There is a new episode of #ArchaeoChats with Dr. Emmanuel Ndiema (@endiema) of the @museumsofkenya. Remember you can now listen to the podcast on ⚓ (https://anchor.fm/archaeochats) and continue to watch the interviews on @YouTube or at the @MPI_SHH website (https://www.shh.mpg.de/1861599/archaeochats).

Reply on Twitter 1367490015647977482Retweet on Twitter 13674900156479774823Like on Twitter 136749001564797748218Twitter 1367490015647977482
Retweet on TwitterPantropica Retweeted
RobertPatalanoRobert Patalano@RobertPatalano·
26 Feb

Its #FieldworkFriday again! Here is a markup of bed displacement due to faulting at Oldupai's Second Fault. On the left (hanging wall), all beds except Naisiusiu are exposed, on the right (foot wall), only the Bed I lavas and Beds I-III are visible. Mount Lemagrut in the back.

Reply on Twitter 1365300593753919491Retweet on Twitter 13653005937539194913Like on Twitter 136530059375391949131Twitter 1365300593753919491
Retweet on TwitterPantropica Retweeted
MPI_SHHMPI-SHH Jena@MPI_SHH·
25 Feb

Rainforests in Australia Were Shaped by Millennia of Aboriginal Land Management - In a new paper, an intl. team of scientists join with Traditional Owners of Queensland’s Wet Tropics to demonstrate the region's ecological, biological, and cultural heritage https://buff.ly/3ssAvsI

Reply on Twitter 1364958788873289734Retweet on Twitter 136495878887328973449Like on Twitter 1364958788873289734119Twitter 1364958788873289734
Retweet on TwitterPantropica Retweeted
RobertPatalanoRobert Patalano@RobertPatalano·
15 Feb

This is a great paper led by @PatrickLee246 on the Maasai of Oldupai Gorge! Paleoanths dig at Oldupai to uncover humanity's past. Maasai dig at Oldupai to withstand drought and have a future. Rarely are these two topics addressed together. Check it out!

https://sciencetechnologystudies.journal.fi/article/view/80516#.YCqMrvUGYPQ.twitter

Reply on Twitter 1361332592465829890Retweet on Twitter 13613325924658298906Like on Twitter 136133259246582989022Twitter 1361332592465829890
Load More...
© Copyright 2021 –
Wisteria Theme by WPFriendship ⋅ Powered by WordPress