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Episode Summary
In this episode, Jason takes you on a tour of top 10 most underrated archaeological sites in the world, or at least that he knows about! Because there is so much to get to, it’s broken down into two parts, with this first segment focusing on North America and Europe. The sites to be featured are:
1) Herculaneum, Italy
2) Carnac, France
3) Skara Brae, Scotland
4) Poverty Point, Louisiana, USA
5) Cahokia Mounds, Illinois, USA
And for today’s Archaeology News, we focus on a epic archaeology smackdown that recently occurred over an ancient DNA (aDNA) study. The paper, led by some renowned Harvard scholars, claimed (with evidence!) to have found an “ethnolinguistic” homeland for Indo-European language speakers. The problem? Language is not detectable archaeologically, plus some bad folks have glommed on to similar theories. We’ll go through the whole argument step-by-step.
Timestamps
1:09: Herculaneum
2:27: Alignements de Carnac
4:14: Skara Brae
5:50: Poverty Point
8:17: Cahokia Mounds
10:26: Archaeology News – The aDNA Smackdown
Links & Resources
Related Episodes
Help us by…
· Rating & Reviewing on Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/no/podcast/into-the-dust-archaeology/id1726480019
· Subscribing on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@Into_the-Dust_Arch
· Contributing on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/IntotheDustArchaeology
· Visiting our website: https://www.intothedustarchaeology.com/
5
22 ratings
Episode Summary
In this episode, Jason takes you on a tour of top 10 most underrated archaeological sites in the world, or at least that he knows about! Because there is so much to get to, it’s broken down into two parts, with this first segment focusing on North America and Europe. The sites to be featured are:
1) Herculaneum, Italy
2) Carnac, France
3) Skara Brae, Scotland
4) Poverty Point, Louisiana, USA
5) Cahokia Mounds, Illinois, USA
And for today’s Archaeology News, we focus on a epic archaeology smackdown that recently occurred over an ancient DNA (aDNA) study. The paper, led by some renowned Harvard scholars, claimed (with evidence!) to have found an “ethnolinguistic” homeland for Indo-European language speakers. The problem? Language is not detectable archaeologically, plus some bad folks have glommed on to similar theories. We’ll go through the whole argument step-by-step.
Timestamps
1:09: Herculaneum
2:27: Alignements de Carnac
4:14: Skara Brae
5:50: Poverty Point
8:17: Cahokia Mounds
10:26: Archaeology News – The aDNA Smackdown
Links & Resources
Related Episodes
Help us by…
· Rating & Reviewing on Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/no/podcast/into-the-dust-archaeology/id1726480019
· Subscribing on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@Into_the-Dust_Arch
· Contributing on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/IntotheDustArchaeology
· Visiting our website: https://www.intothedustarchaeology.com/
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