New paper on charring experiments
My paper describing the findings of experimental charring on millet seeds is out in Vegetation History and Archaeobotany!
My paper describing the findings of experimental charring on millet seeds is out in Vegetation History and Archaeobotany!
I’m very happy to share the news that my article on millet morphometry has been published in the Holocene! You can read the abstract here, and get the online version before Read More …
My article with Daphne Gallagher and Stephen Dueppen has been published in the Journal of Ethnobiology! This is the first large-scale analysis of archaeological shea butter nutshells, excavated from the Read More …
Baekje was the first culture in the Seoul area to build monumental walls, 30 meters tall or even higher. These earthworks have been damaged in places in the ensuing centuries, Read More …
The largest Baekje-era cemetery in Seoul is located south of the Han river at Seokchon-dong, where stone platforms and earthen tumuli dot several city blocks. These are thought to be Read More …
Dr. Lee and I are back in Jeju to catch up with our colleagues at the Jeju Archaeological Institute. We came across this display of squid and had to stop Read More …
The island of Jeju is famous for rocks, wind, and women free-divers who catch various sea creatures you can then eat while gazing at the ocean. My colleagues and I Read More …
We got the amazing opportunity after our SSHRC conference in Beijing to visit the site of the earliest known hominin remains in China, in the picturesque Nihewan Basin. My colleague Habeom Read More …
During the 2014 National Museum of Korea Network Fellowship, we visited Buluguksa Temple, which is having major restoration work done to its famous stone pagodas. Here, Jean Hyun of Oxford Read More …
The National Museum of Korea was already one of my favorite places in Seoul, and in July 2014 I got to spend two weeks there as part of their summer Read More …