WG2 Training School “Knapping in Silicon Valley: Modern Tech for Ancient Objects”
CA19141 iNEAL is announcing the Training school of the Working Group 2 “Knapping in Silicon Valley: Modern Tech for Ancient Objects”. The Training Read More…
CA19141 iNEAL is announcing the Training school of the Working Group 2 “Knapping in Silicon Valley: Modern Tech for Ancient Objects”. The Training Read More…
CA19141 iNEAL is announcing the Training school of the Working Group 4 “Neanderthals in Tourism”. The Training School will be held at Istanbul UnivRead More…
CA19141 iNEAL is announcing the Training school of the Working Group 4 „Presenting Neandertals”. The school will be held at the Autonomous UniverRead More…
CA19141 iNEAL is announcing the Training school of the Working Group 2 „Advancing into Palaeolithic Archaeology: Best practices in multidisciplinarRead More…
CA19141 iNEAL is announcing the Training school of the Working Group 1 „An introduction to geometric morphometric methods for the study of human reRead More…
CA19141 iNEAL is announcing the Training school of the Working Group 3 „Paleogenomics: From sampling and data collection to multidisciplinary analyRead More…
Apply for CA19141 iNEAL Training School Neandertal and Homo sapiens material culture in Middle Paleolithic western Asia 14 March – 16 Read More…
Apply for CA19141 iNEAL Training School Introduction to Neanderthal palaeogenomic analyses for non-geneticists! July 18 – 19, 2022, UniversRead More…
Apply for CA19141 iNEAL Training School Introduction to segmenting/visualizing image data from (micro)-CT scans! June 8 – 10, 2022, University Read More…
Apply for CA19141 iNEAL Training School The technological variability at the transition between Middle to Upper Palaeolithic! May 4 – 6, 2022, Read More…
Ana B. Marín-Arroyo is an Associate Professor of Prehistory at the University of Cantabria, where she leads the Human Evolution Group –EvoAdapta and Associate Scholar at the University of Cambridge (Dpt of Archaeology). She is an archeozoologist specialized in studying the Paleolithic, focusing on how climate changed and humans adapted their diet to those changes with cutting-edge interdisciplinary methods (stable isotopes, Bayesian analysis, modelling, taphonomy). She has a substantial track record of publications and great experience supervising PhD and PostDoc researchers. She created a new line of team research at the UC and has boosted outreach activities in her area with EU funds. She is internationally recognized for her multidisciplinary collaborations and has been awarded several international prizes. Currently, she is the PI of SUBSILIENCE ERC project focused on knowing how the climatic changes at the end of MIS3 could have affected the decline and subsequent extinction of Neanderthals. To do this, she studies the diet of the late Neanderthals and first Homo sapiens in more than 20 key sites in southern Europe during the Middle to Upper Palaeolithic transition, linking human subsistence with paleoclimatic and paleoenvironmental reconstruction and palaeoecological modelling.
Webpages: https://www.subsilience.eu/ and https://www.evoadapta.unican.es/
Dr Florent Rivals graduated in Biology at the University Paul Sabatier in Toulouse, and received PhD in Prehistory from the University of Perpignan in 2002. In 2004, he completed a postdoc at the American Museum of Natural History and in 2005, he was awarded a fellowship from the Humboldt Foundation at the Universität Hamburg (Germany). Dr. Rivals was appointed ICREA Junior Researcher (2007 to 2012) at the Institut Català de Paleoecologia Humana i Evolució Social and since 2013, he is ICREA Research Professor at the same institution. He is principal investigator of a coordinated research project on Neanderthal behaviour and paleoecology in the Mediterranean ecosystems funded by the Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation. He also participates in various national and international projects related to Neanderthal paleoecology. His primary research interest is in evolutionary paleoecology and the ecological context of evolution. The analysis of mammalian fauna from Pleistocene sites provides the framework for studying the evolution of hominins. His research focuses on the impact of climate-driven environmental changes on hominins, and Neanderthals in particular. Examining mammal teeth, such as bison, deer, horse and mammoth, under a microscope and looking at the marks left by the food they ate (known as the last supper phenomenon), provides insight into the habitats they roamed just before they died. The changes in diet over thousands of years are used to reconstruct ancient environments, to track shifts related to climatic changes, and to understand hominin behavioural strategies in different ecological settings. Beyond Western Europe, his research is also focussing on the Near East.
Webpage: https://www.icrea.cat/Web/ScientificStaff/florent-rivals-418
Dr Maria Gurova is Senior Researcher and Associate Professor of Prehistory at the National Institute of Archaeology with Museum, Bulgarian Academy of Sciences (NIAM–BAS). She graduated from Sofia University and completed her PhD at the Experiments and Use-wear Analysis Laboratory of the Archaeological institute of St-Petersburg, Russian Academy of Sciences. Subsequently, she was awarded fellowships at CRA/CNRS, Sophia-Antipolis (France); NIAS-Wassenaar (Netherlands); Albright Institute, Jerusalem (Israel); CRF/RSE Edinburgh (UK). She has built her career in the Prehistory Department of NIAM–BAS. Maria Gurova conducts research in Prehistoric Archaeology with a focus on chipped-stone assemblages from Palaeolithic sites in Bulgaria, and more broadly on the Holocene sequences of the Balkans, Anatolia and Southern Levant (raw material, techno-typological and use-wear analysis). She is author/co-author of 215 publications and has contributed to more than 80 international conferences and symposia. She participated in several International Palaeolithic Projects (with CENIEH – Burgos; Albany University – NY, USA; FWO – KU Leuven and RBINS – Brussels, Belgium). Her experience of Palaeolithic fieldwork includes excavations in the caves of Temnata, Kozarnika, Magura and Mishin Kamik (the last mentioned investigated under her scientific direction). Maria Gurova is Editor-in-chief of the open-access Bulgarian e-Journal of Archaeology. In 2019 she received awards from the Web of Science group – for excellence in scientific research, and Clarivate Analytics – for outstanding contribution to global scientific research.
Websites: www.naim.bg, www.researchgate.net/profile/Maria_Gurova, http://naim.academia.edu/MariaGUROVA, https://orcid.org/0000-0002-2702-2117
Johann Galdies is a Maltese palaeontologist who read for a bachelor’s degree in Biology and Chemistry at the University of Malta, where, for his final-year dissertation, he investigated recent pollen deposits in the Maltese garrigue habitat. He later read for a master’s degree in Earth and Planetary Science, specialising in Palaeontology and Palaeoclimatology at the University of Lille, where, for his master’s dissertation, he worked on the geometric morphometrics of Pleistocene bear bones. Johann is currently employed at the University of Malta, where he is working as a Research Support Officer within the Department of Geosciences. His main research interests are vertebrate palaeontology and archaeozoology, palaeoecology, palynology, taxonomy and comparative anatomy.
Websites: https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Johann_Galdies, https://www.um.edu.mt/profile/johanngaldies
Dr. Ivor Janković is a paleoanthropologist and prehistoric archaeologist at the Institute for Anthropological Research in Zagreb. He is also an adjunct full professor at the Department of Anthropology, University of Wyoming. His main professional interests are human evolution, particularly biological adaptations during the Middle and Late Pleistocene and Palaeolithic archaeology
Morana Jarec, PhD, is a research administrator at the Institute for Anthropological Research, Zagreb, Croatia, and grant manager of the COST Action 19141 Integrating Neandertal Legacy – From Past to Present (iNEAL). She was Management Committee member and member of Working Groups Administration and Finance in the Targeted Network 1302 The Voice of Research Administrators – Building a Network of Administrative Excellence (BESTPRAC), funded by COST. Apart from continuous training in the country, she attended various trainings abroad covering a wide range of research administration topics like supporting successful grant proposals, key financial tasks, project lifecycle and communication skills, legal affairs in EC grants etc. In the Institute for Anthropological Research, she is also coordinating the organization of international scientific conferences and meetings, she is Legal Appointed Entity Representative for EC key framework programs for research and innovation, member of the the Institute’s Ethical Board, contact person for Erasmus+ mobility and contact person for the implementation of HRS4R strategy. She is also a social anthropologist with main research interest in interaction of large infrastructure and population in rural regions.
Dr. Stefano Benazzi is Full Professor of physical anthropology at the University of Bologna, with special interest in paleoanthropology, bioarchaeology and biomechanics. He is particularly interested in the latest period of human evolution (Middle and Upper Palaeolithic periods), the appearance of modern humans in Europe and the demise of Neandertals. Since teeth are the most frequent human fossil remains found in the archaeological record, he is particularly focused on developing computer-based methods for dental morphometric analysis, which are suitable in paleoanthropology for taxonomical assessment. He uses virtual approaches and geometric morphometric methods for the purposes of bone reconstruction and shape analysis of skeletal remains. He finds the relationship between function and morphology in primate dentition very intriguing and he wants to address this issue by means of finite element methods and macrowear analysis.
Websites: https://www.unibo.it/sitoweb/stefano.benazzi , http://www.erc-success.eu/ , https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q5wTgk4XMvg
Ľubomíra Kaminská is an archaeologist at Institute of Archaeology of Slovak Academy of Sciences, at the Department in Košice, with a focus on the field excavations, technology of lithic industries and raw material procurement. She deals with the issue of Middle and Upper Palaeolithic in Slovakia. In its research she uses knowledge and experience from several study stays in Germany, Austria, the Czech Republic, France, Hungary and Poland.
Websites: https://www.sav.sk/?lang=en&doc=user-org-user&user_no=3542 , https://saske.academia.edu/%C4%BDubom%C3%ADraKaminsk%C3%A1
Prof Marco Peresani is Associate Professor at Department of Humanities, University of Ferrara, Italy. Since 1993 Marco Peresani designs and coordinates research projects focused on the human populations of Mediterranean Europe, particularly in the north of Italy and the Alps. The Neanderthal – Anatomically Modern Humans bio-cultural replacement and the Late Glacial and Early Holocene hunter-gatherer settlement dynamics are the main topics he deals with. As an archaeologist and a geoarcheologist, he studies depositional and post-depositional processes and uses lithic technology as a primary research tool. Most relevant investigations have revealed the existence of behavioural variability of the Neanderthals, across the Middle – Upper Palaeolithic Transition and the Upper Palaeolithic up to the Early Mesolithic. His research projects involve numerous sites in the Italian Alps and the Marche Apennines, among which Grotta di Fumane and other sites in Friuli and Veneto with key cultural sedimentary sequences.
Vangelis Tourloukis (PhD, Leiden University) works as Senior Researcher at the Department of Palaeoanthropology, University of Tübingen. He has a broad training in Prehistoric Archaeology and his research focuses on the Palaeolithic period, lithic technology and geoarchaeology. Vangelis has extensive experience as co-director of field research and lithic analyst in several survey projects and excavations in Greece and Turkey. Since 2012, he is directing the excavations and surveys that take place in the framework of the ERC projects PaGE (2012-2016) and CROSSROADS (2017-2022), where he is responsible for designing the research methodology, coordinating the field and laboratory analyses of the cultural material, and contextualizing the chronological and paleoenvironmental data. In the study of prehistoric cultural remains, Tourloukis investigates the evolutionary dynamics between early human technology, subsistence strategies and environmental settings. His research interests include the evolution of the human niche, the role of technology in early human behaviour, and the socio-economic and ecological contexts of hominin behavioural diversity.
Website: https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Vangelis_Tourloukis
Trained as both an archaeologist and paleoanthropologist, Dr. Manuel Will’s main research interest lies in the study of human evolution from a joint bio-cultural perspective that takes evidence from human artefacts and fossils into consideration. His current research projects focus on aspects of the cultural, behavioural and biological evolution of our genus and species in Africa and their dispersal to the rest of the world. His main expertise in Palaeolithic archaeology is the analysis of lithic assemblages from Middle Stone Age and Middle Palaeolithic contexts to study the cultural evolution and behavioural adaptations of early Homo sapiens and Neanderthals. The focus of his paleoanthropological work concerns the evolution of body size in the genus Homo. Dr. Will is also interested in theoretical archaeology and evolutionary biology, including evolutionary archaeology, niche construction and cultural transmission theory. He has been part of archaeological excavations in Europe, the Near East and Africa, and currently co-directs fieldwork in South Africa and Germany.
Websites:
https://uni-tuebingen.de/fakultaeten/mathematisch-naturwissenschaftliche-fakultaet/fachbereiche/geowissenschaften/arbeitsgruppen/urgeschichte-naturwissenschaftliche-archaeologie/forschungsbereich/aeltere-urgeschichte-quartaeroekologie/mitarbeiter/akademische-mitarbeiterinnen-und-mitarbeiter/dr-manuel-will/ , https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Manuel-Will
Dr. Parisa Göker graduated from Ankara University, Agriculture Faculty, Department of Landscape Architecture. She is full time Associate Professor at Bilecik Şeyh Edebali University in Turkey. Also, she is the Head of Department of Interior architecture and Environment Design. Her researches are about historical and cultural landscape, cultural heritage, historic palace gardens, archaeological landscapes.
Ms Tamara LESKOVAR is a postdoctoral researcher at the Department of Archaeology and a member of the Council of the Centre for Interdisciplinary Research in Archaeology at the Faculty of Arts, University of Ljubljana, specialised in various types of analysis of skeletal remains, from macroscopic to biomolecular. She completed undergraduate and postgraduate studies in archaeology at the Department of Archaeology, Faculty of Arts, University of Ljubljana. During the postgraduate studies in archaeology in Ljubljana, she received a scholarship from the AHRC (Arts and Humanities Research Council), which enabled her to pursue a Master of Science in Human Osteology and palaeopathology at the University of Bradford (UK) in parallel. While studying at Bradford, she was awarded a project from the Society for the Study of Human Biology (SSHB, UK) researching stable isotopes in human ossicles. For her postdoctoral studies in archaeology, she received a Fulbright scholarship and worked as a visiting scholar at Quinnipiac University in Connecticut (USA). She also received a DAAD scholarship for training in human and animal bone histology at Ludwig Maximilian University in Munich (DE). Since her return to Slovenia in 2017, she has been employed at the Department of Archaeology, Faculty of Arts, University of Ljubljana. She was included into the Humanities in the European Research Area (HERA) project Encounters and Transformations in Iron Age Europe (ENTRANS), and into the Cremation or Inhumation of ancient populations? A Multidisciplinary question at the European level (CRIME) project, performing various analyses of human skeletal remains. She was also included into the project Interreg Iron Age Danube (IAD) for the protection, promotion and tourist use of cultural heritage, and into the project Researchers Night for the promotion and presentation of science to the general public. She is currently working on research and commercial archaeological and anthropological projects, conducting archaeological fieldwork and various macroscopic and microscopic analyses of human remains.
Adrián Nemergut is an archaeologist at the Department of Prehistoric Archaeology at Institute of Archaeology of Slovak Academy of Sciences, with a focus on the field excavations, technology of lithic industries and raw material procurement. He deals with the issue of Middle to Upper Palaeolithic transition in Slovakia, especially in the research of Szeletian, which was probably carried by the last Neanderthals. In research he uses knowledge and experience from several study stays, workshops and field research, e.g. in Belarus, Czech Republic, England, France, Poland and Spain.
Websites: https://www.sav.sk/?lang=en&doc=user-org-user&user_no=7186 , https://sav-sk.academia.edu/AdrianNemergut
Prof. dr. Paweł Valde-Nowak was born in Cracow (Poland), 24 May 1954. He received in 1979 an M.A. in archaeology from Jagiellonian University in Cracow and Ph. D. in Polish Academy of Sciences in Warsaw in 1986. After habilitation in 1996 in Polish Academy of Sciences, Warsaw, he became Professor title from the Praesident of Poland in 2003. In the years 2003-2005 he worked as the Professor of archaeology in the University of Gdańsk, in the years 2010-2011 as the Professor of archaeology in the University of Cologne, Germany, 2019-2020 University of Hradec Kralove, Czech Republik. Actually he is Professor of Stone Age Archaeology in the Jagiellonian University of Cracow and up to 2015 he was a senior scientist in the Polish Academy of Sciences, Cracow. Pawel Valde-Nowak is a Fellow of Alexander von Humboldt Foundation, Bonn and Academy of Sciences and Literature in Mainz (both Germany) and guest-teacher of archaeology in the University of Tübingen (1999-2000) as well as in Erlangen-Nürnberg University (1992). He is author of over 300 papers, reports and author or editor of 8 books. The main topics in that publications is the Stone Age archaeology, mountainous archaeology, Neanderthal and early Homo Sapiens cave settlement, identification of the role of palynology in the studies of Neolithic time and flint working techniques.
Webiste: https://archeo.uj.edu.pl/en_GB/
Dr. Bärbel Auffermann is the director of Neanderthal Museum in Germany. They are telling the story of human evolution close to the famous discovery site of the first Neanderthal remains.Dr. Auffermann is archaeologist and worked as exhibition manager at Neanderthal Museum since the opening in 1996. She played a decisive role in the conception and realization of visitor-oriented permanent and temporary exhibitions. She is also spokeswoman of Archaeological Museums in the German Museum Association and participate in advisory boards and board of trustees of renowned German museums as well as Ecsite, the European network of science centers and museums. Dr. Auffermann participates in the development of the network Ice Age Europe.
Website: www.neanderthal.de
Dr Jean-Luc Voisin is associated to the Aix-Marseille University. Dr. Voisin’s two main research topics are The Neandertal: from dawn to dusk & The shoulder architecture within the Hominoids. The goal of the topic The Neandertal: from dawn to dusk is to understand the Neandertal meta-population as a whole and in its variability across time and space. For example, dr. Voisin has demonstrated that there is an East to West morphological cline, in Neandertal meta-population. Eastward populations display less marked Neandertal traits than their westward counterparts. This might reflect a speciation by distance phenomenon. Neandertal humanity can be fully understood only by taking into account other species like first modern humans in Europe and pre-Neanderthal populations. It is necessary to consider also other contemporaries human populations elsewhere in the world like Homo naledi. Non-European species could help us to understand mechanisms of differentiation and speciation involving modern humans and Neanderthal. Regarding the second topic, the shoulder architecture within the Hominoids, Dr. Voisin has established that there is not one but at least 3 different shoulder architectures within the genus Homo. Those of modern humans and Neandertals are different in many aspects. He is also working on the origin of the shoulder impingement syndrome which becomes very common after 40 years old in our species, which is nearly inexistent in Apes. He has shown that this trouble may affect Neandertals as well as first modern humans but maybe not the Australopithecines.
Web sites: http://jeanlucvoisin.free.fr/ , http://anthropologicaldata.free.fr/
Trine Kellberg Nielsen, PhD, is Associate Professor at the School of Culture and Society, Department of Archeology and Heritage Studies, Aarhus University, Denmark. Dr. Kellberg Nielsen is a Paleolithic archaeologist and her research focuses on the northernmost range of Neanderthals (Homo neanderthalensis). She is particularly interested in how Neanderthals adapted to the high northern latitudes and in understanding what defines their northern margin of dispersal at various timescales across their vast occupational range.
Institution website: https://pure.au.dk/portal/da/persons/trine-kellberg-nielsen(f125b955-defe-4545-b767-2deb0a37ee62).html
Project website: https://projects.au.dk/neanderedge/
Juljana Bilbilaj is a young researcher and expert working with development and research projects. Ms. Bilbilaj holds a Master of Science Degree in International Relations and Diplomacy from the Mediterranean University of Tirana. Since 2013 she has been working as a junior researcher for Institute of Political Studies. From 2017 till 2020 she was a Researcher at the Parliament of Albania. Starting from 2018 she has been working as assistant lecturer, Faculty of Psychological, Social and Political Sciences at Mediterranean University of Albania and project coordinator for Institutional Cooperation and Project Development Office, Mesdheu Center. Ms. Bilbilaj is highly involved in project management/monitoring and evaluation, desk study and field research, working for and/or in cooperation with different national and governmental, and private organization, including Albanian Government, Institute of Political Science, Open Society Foundation for Albania, Friedrich Ebert Stiftung, Albanian Red Cross, Association of Public Health Students in Albania, Intitute for Democacy Media and Culture, etc. Her areas of expertise: international organizations, political leadership, regional development; European Union integration and accession processes. ”
Website: http://qzhi.org/al/