university professors love to create the most fucked up pdf ever known to mankind. it's enrichment for them.
what HAPPENED here
$100,000,000,000,000,000,000 budget for Foot Ball
$0.03 and a stick of gum for Scanner
tumblr dot com
Sweet Seals For You, Always
wallacepolsom

Product Placement

Kaledo Art

Origami Around
dirt enthusiast
KIROKAZE

titsay
ojovivo
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH
Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ

祝日 / Permanent Vacation
i don't do bad sauce passes
Xuebing Du
Jules of Nature
cherry valley forever

Love Begins

Janaina Medeiros
Misplaced Lens Cap

seen from Singapore

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@bonesandcoffeemugs
university professors love to create the most fucked up pdf ever known to mankind. it's enrichment for them.
what HAPPENED here
$100,000,000,000,000,000,000 budget for Foot Ball
$0.03 and a stick of gum for Scanner
For anyone interested, this is an interactive map of historical witch executions in scotland, by the university of Edinburg
https://witches.is.ed.ac.uk/
Archaeologist problems: 15-year-old trowel too small. Trowel available at local hardware store too big.
Archaeologist solutions: Grind like there’s no tomorrow.
Archaeologist / Egyptologist Dr. Anna Stevens enters the royal tomb at Amarna. Lost Treasures of Egypt: Hunt for Queen Nefertiti (S2E05) (2020)
researching: Great! Amazing! Love learning! Finding out new things! Cool beans! Fielwork! Books! Data! Wowie!
writing article: Hmmmmm not as fun for sure but like. The process. helps a little to put things into words. 5/10 i guess it’s o k
editing article: I crave the sweet release of death. Endless years I have suffered - tell me when it will end? Language is meaningless and I have lost sight of my path. Here alone in the desert I wander, searching the empty expanses of my mind for a synonym. How to tempt Word into formatting my diagrams without ruinous consequence? I am the master of my own garden of sorrow.
writing the cover letter to go with the article submission: somehow f u c k i n g w o r s e
me looking at my research, my research looking at me, me looking at my research, my research looking at me, me looking at my resea
──── EGYPTOLOGISTS ────
Dr. Ramadan Hussein from Eberhard Karls University of Tübingen (Germany). He has undertaken excavations in the Saqqara necropolis, featured in the doumentary Kingdom of the Mummies (2020).
Rest in peace Dr. Hussein, a terrible loss of a wonderful Egyptologist and human being.
MIA update
So, since I’ve been properly MIA since like April(??), I thought it would be a nice opportunity to share a summary of what I have been up to in the last months.
This is also a face reveal of the happy, yet tired, marine biologist behind this blog:
Long post ahead, so prepare! Lots of pictures too
Seguir leyendo
The Dead Sea Scrolls fragments of Jeremiah are about 2200 years old. A team ran DNA tests on them last year to see which animals they came from and I was trying to find out why one fragment was labeled with the suffixes -nt and -t as though it were two different scrolls.
I was not strong enough to bear the weight of knowing the answer.
Like, all of the Dead Sea Scrolls are of enormous historical value for early Judaism, but this one in particular gives us a glimpse into the Hebrew text-type the Septuagint translators used and … and y- … you used scotch tape on it?!?!?!?
and what is “translate truthful to the time it was written” even supposed to mean like there’s no way a translation now in the US could be read the same way it was a couple thousand years ago in Greece when english didn’t even exist yet
Yep, in the original Odyssey, in the scene where Telemachus murders the slaves who were “sullied by” Penelope’s suiters, he refers to them with a word that roughly just means “the female ones”, however most translations will use words like “whores”, “sluts” and “creatures”, these were all choices of the translators. The original text did not refer to them that way. Dr. Wilson refers to them instead as “girls”, to highlight their age and the brutality of the action. She also fixed all the times the previous male translators dodged around the existence of slaves in the text. Where they call slaves anything but slaves (housemaid, nurse, cook, ect.) Dr. Wilson’s translation correctly calls them slaves as in the original texts. It’s really a great translation, it doesn’t soften anything, and lays bare the reality of the story. One thing she did too, was she refused to make the descriptions of the women in the story more palatable to modern western beauty standards. The original text, for example, describes Penelope’s hands as “thick”. Most male translators change this to “steady” but Dr. Wilson’s translation calls them “firm, muscular hands” to correctly portray the original intent, that Penelope, as a character who weaves every day and every night undoes her weavings, has strong hands, as weaving does make one’s hands more muscular, and that was clearly what was originally intended to be said given the context of her character and the weavings. Of Odysseus himself, the original epic calls him “polytropos” poly, meaning many, and tropos, meaning turn. Some male translators used this to say the story itself had twists and turns, other ignored the word completely to write in a way that made Odysseus seem as though a straight up hero, a man “skilled in all ways of contending”, but Dr. Wilson uses it to mean “complicated”, because Odysseus isn’t a straight up hero, he does some really shitty things. So her translation got a lot of men very very mad, because they said that her being a woman has caused her to translate with bias since her translation is so different to others. She pointed out that perhaps people should have suggested that bias in the inaccurate men’s translations. Anyway, go read Dr. Wilson’s version of The Odyssey. It’s very good.
How to tell the 4 subfields of Anthropology apart
Cultural: Science hippy. Has absolutely had one or more of the following: kava, ayuasca, salvia, pot. Probably bilingual. Very angry on the inside because they fly too close to the dark side of humanity. The most anthro of the anthros. Do not mess with them, they’re quiet and tough enough to go asking random people very strange questions.
Physical/Biological: Real Scientists (TM). The ones with the lab coats. They probably loved physical sciences but hate math and they like their science just a hair too messy to be physicists. Gets easily frustrated by the physical sciences’ tendency to forget that people have brains and make choices for reasons that often amount to “eh, I felt like it”. Perpetually thinking: it’s hominiN.
Archeologists: superstitious AF. Will absolutely cut you for naming a skeleton, but if you say you’re sorry and you don’t do it again then they’ll take you out and drink you under the table. Plays with sharp objects a lot. Prone to cursing. Will fight you for one (1) nickel. 🎶can you paint with all the colors of the dirt🎶 will argue over strata until it’s time for lunch. Anal retentive af inside the trench, chaotic outside of it.
Linguists: Despite studying something completely unique to humans and despite their methodology not being terribly far from that of geneticists’, they will all go: “subfield. *rolls eyes*”. Huge, giant nerds. Like so, so nerdy. Sometimes it says linguistics on their degree. Mysterious sibling that your friends have never met.
I hope everyone had a wonderful Holiday season!
Even Charles was in the spirit!
I wanted to share some new books I acquired over the holiday with you, I’m very lucky to have a family that encourages my interests.
From left to right:
No Bone Unturned by Jeff Benedict
Dr. Mütter’s Marvels by Cristin O’keefe Aptowicz
Illustrations of the Gross Morbid Anatomy of the Brain of the Insane (1908) by I.W Blackburn
A Forest of Kong’s by Linda as he’ll and David Freidel
Jungleland by Christopher Stewart
People may have walked along the shore of a lake in New Mexico 23,000 years ago.
JAKARTA: Archaeologists have discovered the remains of a 7,200-year-old skeleton from a female hunter-gatherer in Indonesia that has a "dist
Friends, new human just dropped
i have a weird appreciation for Baroque artists, in particular Francois Boucher and Peter Paul Rubens, for depicting the human body in lush detail at a time that predates the standards for bodies to be thin and airbrushed with no wrinkles or cellulite
it’s just really interesting to me
so many the things women are taught to hate about their bodies—pudgy bellies, fat rolls, double chins, and cellulite—used to be ideals of beauty shown in depictions of goddesses
i can not and i mean i can not stress this enough… make a bibliography as you do your research. i mean, make a fully formed, correctly cited bibliography as you work. just do it. i know i know you’re being lazy or you hate making citations or you’ll just get to it later or you don’t want to get distracted etc etc etc
whatever your reasons just make the fuckin bibliography
and while im at it… put the footnotes in properly as you are writing. just… do it. for future you. please. for your sanity. do it.
Hi guys! As some of you may know, I’ve been trying to switch over to Notion to stream-line all my research progress and notes in one space. Unfortunately, all the examples I found here on Tumblr and on Youtube were more geared towards a bullet journal adaptation of Notion or more undergraduate-focused use of the app, which wasn’t what I wanted to model mine after. Therefore, I decided to play around with Notion myself and ended up making it work for my purposes. Because I am using this with the intention of being more focused and having my priorities straight, I kept the theme pretty basic and efficient. I am still working on learning how to use this app for my purposes but I decided to make this post to show you guys how I set up my Notion. Feel free to message me if you ever have any questions about my set-up or would like to see more of how I set a particular page up. Some toggles and texts are blurred out for research privacy purposes since it is unpublished data. [click on individual images for full res.]