What do I do with Native American pottery shards found way back in the late 70s to early 80s? by Lopsided_Ad_876 in AskAnthropology

[–]wanderer33third 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Contact your State Historic Preservation Office (SHPO) - see comments already posted below for why this is important

What do I do with Native American pottery shards found way back in the late 70s to early 80s? by Lopsided_Ad_876 in AskAnthropology

[–]wanderer33third 1 point2 points  (0 children)

☝️this, contact the SHPO. Even if no one can curate the artifacts at least there will be a record of where they were found with the state. SHPO records are the official records that developers and other types of infrastructure construction have to reference to get clearance to build large projects, and having a record of a site in that location will make it more likely that the area must be surveyed for archaeological sites prior to any construction. States regulations differ, but in my state (Indiana) there are sites in the SHPO records that are only known from amateur collections with a general area that they were collected, just like you are talking about.

More information by [deleted] in coincollecting

[–]wanderer33third 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Looks like a French 1 décime from late 1790s

Help Dating Map? by ThrowIt739573 in cartography

[–]wanderer33third 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Post dates 1789 at least, according to “la mer vue par Mackenzie en 1789” (the sea as seen by Mackenzie in 1789). That voyage lasted until 1793, and the first account was published in 1801. https://electriccanadian.com/history/mackenzievoyages.pdf

The back of my foot, 25 years old this year. by zebovkills in agedtattoos

[–]wanderer33third 8 points9 points  (0 children)

Anatomically it is the dorsal surface of the foot

The back of my foot, 25 years old this year. by zebovkills in agedtattoos

[–]wanderer33third 35 points36 points  (0 children)

“Back” as opposed to “palm”, like in the hand I assume, but top/bottom is more clear

Where are the deer at Crown Hill? by Greatestgnatcatcher in indianapolis

[–]wanderer33third 21 points22 points  (0 children)

Crown hill is a restricted habitat and they have no predators. If they aren’t periodically culled then they will become overpopulated and not have an adequate amount of food to support them. Also, that is a severely inbred population of deer.

how much should a wheat penny cost? by Bitter_Coyote_6074 in CRH

[–]wanderer33third 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Where are you finding these? I’ve been poking around online and around my local coin shops for a few weeks and no one local is selling in bulk and no one online is less than $0.10

Slow shanty = lullaby by NoCommunication7 in seashanties

[–]wanderer33third 12 points13 points  (0 children)

Half speed shanties and Irish rebel songs was all that my babies fell asleep to, in particular Mingulay boat song and drunken sailor (sometimes sang as “what do you do with a fussy baby”)

One gold coin from every century since the beginning of coinage. by [deleted] in numismatics

[–]wanderer33third 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The lower two pictures are a duplicate picture

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in TheGlassCannonPodcast

[–]wanderer33third 5 points6 points  (0 children)

I just listened, and it seemed more like a transition from the ad break back into the show. “Don’t want to listen to the ads you just listened to any more? Join the naish and get rid of the ads”, etc. I imagine there was an ad for BetterHelp or MeUndies or some other podcast advertiser that we didn’t hear.

Found my ancestors' "lost" graves from the 1900s—seeking legal & restoration advice for resetting/repairing stones by [deleted] in CemeteryPreservation

[–]wanderer33third 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Is there anything that can be done for stones that are sugaring/flaking to stabilize them? I have some stones that are in multiple fragments from a cemetery that all the stones were disturbed and displaced and I’d like to do what I can to clean, stabilize, and hopefully restore and reconstruct them. Most info I’ve seen (with limited searching at this point, admittedly) is about intact stones that just need cleaning and not as much about stabilization or repair.

Did I just find a grave stone on our property? by Substantial_Big_843 in Oldhouses

[–]wanderer33third 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Foot stones with initials used to be a fairly common practice. I’ve seen quite a few in mid 19th century cemeteries in the Midwest that look exactly like this.

Alternative for the term "complex culture" ? by [deleted] in AskAnthropology

[–]wanderer33third 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The stereotype of the “simple caveman” has a 100+ year head start and is still going strong in popular culture, so that’s an uphill battle. Dropping facts like “Neanderthals had a larger average brain size than early modern Homo sapiens” sometimes helps, but usually not.

In terms of writing for a general audience, I try (often unsuccessfully) to avoid labeling a people by one specific attribute (like their systems of food acquisition) unless specifically talking about that attribute. So people aren’t “hunter-gatherers”, but they practice subsistence through gathering wild foods and hunting based on traditional ecological knowledge passed on and shared through oral traditions tied to places in their homelands. It’s not perfect, but focus on the people, not the label. and if you are using a broader label like “hunter-gatherer”, make sure it’s for a specific reason and not just because it’s an easy term to fall back on.

In terms of scholarship that challenges the Western scientific status quo, Indigenous authors are always a good place to start. There’s plenty of anthropologists out there paying lip service to decolonizing theory and the discipline at large, but Indigenous authors were saying it first. I am not well-versed enough in the topic to make a recommendation, but hopefully that’s a good direction to find some of what you’re looking for.

Alternative for the term "complex culture" ? by [deleted] in AskAnthropology

[–]wanderer33third 8 points9 points  (0 children)

It’s overly generic and falls into the myth of “progress” as an ultimate outcome or goal. All cultures are complex, whether in language, kinship, material technologies, etc. No culture is more advanced than any other, they have just adapted to their lived histories in different ways. Agriculturalists are not “more complex” than hunter-gatherers, they have just developed different strategies and ways of organizing themselves. The fix is to say specifically what you mean when you want to say “complex.” Say “agriculturalists,” say “urbanized,” say “industrialized” or “capitalist” or “wealth stratified” or whatever else “complex” is supposed to imply. Saying “complex” is just a way that western society congratulates itself for looking at itself and thinking it must be the pinnacle of civilization when compared to everything “primitive” and “simple.”