Oxford Archaeological Society
Oxford Archaeological Society
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Pathways to complexity in Mauritanian prehistory with Dr Gonzalo J. Linares Matás
Assessing the formative pathways of prehistoric African polities contributes to a more holistic understanding of Africa’s heritage, as well as towards expanding global debates on the nature, context, and manifestations of emergent patterns of socio-political complexity. The escarpments of southeastern Mauritania witnessed the emergence, consolidation, and transformations of social and architectural complexity at a scale hitherto unparalleled in West Africa. However, security concerns have prevented fieldwork in recent years. In this context, the availability of satellite imagery and the high detectability of stone-built features provide invaluable avenues for archaeological research. Here, I discuss the results of a comprehensive remote sensing survey documenting the prehistoric monumental funerary landscapes and settlement dynamics associated with the Tichitt Tradition, combining insights from the African Internal Frontier and the multi-scalar dynamics of complex adaptive systems. The archaeological record of southeastern Mauritania also illustrates how mobility and connectivity have constitute a recurrent survival strategy for agropastoral communities across the shifting and unstable frontier between the Saharan desert and the semi-arid grasslands of the Sahel.
Переглядів: 237

Відео

Lin Foxhall on Communities, Rural Economies and Diet in Bronze and Iron Age Greece
Переглядів 282Рік тому
Traditional accounts of the transition from Bronze Age to Iron Age in Greece identified a huge drop in population after the demise of the palaces (around 1200/1150 BCE) followed, it was argued, by less arable farming which led to a ‘pastoral economy’ in the early Iron Age. This picture was believed to be supported by the high value placed on livestock and meat-eating in Homeric epic. While this...
Helena Hamerow on Feeding Medieval England
Переглядів 280Рік тому
Professor Hamerow gives her talk: "Feeding Medieval England: A Long ‘Agricultural Revolution'". Was the Medieval Agricultural Revolution really a revolution? or an evolution? In this talk Professor Hamerow explores the "extensification" between the 8th and 12th centuries. How we can see this archaeologically through weeds, arthritis in beasts of burden, and charred seeds. And how this led to nu...
Shadreck Chirikure on Women and African Pyrotechnology
Переглядів 85Рік тому
Professor Chirikure gives his talk: "In women they trusted: archaeological science and gendered participation in African pyrotechnologies". Shadreck Chirikure is a professor at the University of Cape Town, and holds a British Academy Global Professorship within the School of Archaeology at Oxford. He is a leading archaeologist, studying pyrotechnology and southern Africa.
Guillaume Porraz: Eleven Backed Pieces from the Upper Paleolithic of Les Pres De Laure
Переглядів 84Рік тому
Guillaume Porraz is an archaeologist and prehistorian at the CNRS (National Centre for Scientific Research). He specializes in the technical know-how associated with the creation and use of stone tools. Through his work, he explores the processes of adaptation and innovation that have been part of the history of hunter-gatherer societies since their origins, and he conducts excavations in the S...
Chris Stringer on Human Evolution, Recent Discoveries, and their Implications
Переглядів 58 тис.Рік тому
Professor Chris Stringer is the Research Leader in Human Origins at the London Natural History Museum. His early research was on the relationship of Neanderthals and early modern humans in Europe, but through his work on the ‘Recent African Origin’ model for modern human origins, collaborating with archaeologists, dating specialists, and geneticists, he works on reconstructing the evolution of ...
Tim Ingold: The Gathering Shadows of Material Things
Переглядів 345Рік тому
Professor Emeritus Tim Ingold has made pathbreaking contributions to our understanding of human-environment and human-material relations. He has carried out fieldwork among Saami and Finnish people in Lapland and has written extensively on the environment, technology, and social organization in the circumpolar north, on animals in human society, and on human ecology and evolutionary theory. His...
Chris Gosden on English Identities and Landscapes
Переглядів 87Рік тому
Professor Chris Gosden is a Fellow of Keble College and Professor in European Archaeology at the School of Archaeology. He has recently been involved in directing the English Landscape and Identities project looking at the history of the English Landscape from 1500 BC to AD 1088, and the European Celtic Art in Context project, exploring Celtic art and its eastern connections. Original talk held...
David Lewis-Williams on San Cave Art
Переглядів 1,1 тис.Рік тому
Professor Emeritus Lewis-Williams enriched archaeology with his interpretations of cave art through the shamanistic rituals and altered states of consciousness linked to the ethnology of San Bushmen. On the 18th of October 2021, he presented us with his latest research and updates on the topic.
Clive Gamble: Neanderthal Socio-ecology: Persistent Places & Resource Control at La Cotte & Lynford
Переглядів 135Рік тому
Dr. Clive Gamble is an Emeritus Professor at the University of Southampton. He specializes in the archaeology of human origins, and has undertaken pioneering research into the social life of our earliest ancestors. He recently completed the project "Crossing the threshold: the evolution of place and landscape in earliest prehistory", focused on re-imagining the unparalleled sequence of lithic a...
Chris Scarre on Atlantic Connections and Megalithic Monuments
Переглядів 209Рік тому
Dr. Chris Scarre is a professor of archaeology at the University of Durham. He is a specialist in the prehistory of Western Europe, with particular interest in the archaeology of the Atlantic façade (Portugal, France, Britain & Ireland). On 22nd November 2021 he gave a talk on "Atlantic Mobility and Megalithic Monuments," in which he explored human movements and discussed the old idea of a "meg...
Brian Fagan on The World of the Erythraean Sea
Переглядів 217Рік тому
Dr. Brian Fagan is a Professor Emeritus of Anthropology at the University of California, Santa Barbara, and a prolific author and renowned lecturer. His research and expertise spans a broad range of human prehistory. On 15th November 2021 he gave a talk on the World of the Erythraean Sea, in which he will explore the monsoon trade of the Indian Ocean with special reference to the East African c...
Ian Hodder on Decolonizing Çatalhöyük
Переглядів 2,5 тис.Рік тому
Professor Ian Hodder is the Dunlevie Family Professor in the department of anthropology at Stanford University. He also led the Çatalhöyük Research Project, directing an international team of archaeologists in excavating Çatalhöyük, a 9,000-year-old site in Turkey and one of the world’s first urban centers. His work contributes to our understanding of the development of one of the world’s earli...
Patricia Mcnanay: Q&A on Questioning Collapse
Переглядів 64Рік тому
On 29-10-2021, Professor Patrician McAnnay of University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill held a Q&A session on Questioning Collapse, a text which offers a reading of history centering resilience and continuity in contrast to the mainstream view which says that ancient societies "collapsed." Additionally, McAnnay suggested that interested particpants view two other texts which can be accessed her...
Coming to Terms with the Anthropocene with Thomas Hylland Eriksen
Переглядів 41Рік тому
Thomas Hylland Eriksen is a Professor of Social Anthropology at the University of Oslo. He has written extensively about identity politics, ethnicity, nationalism, cosmopolitanism, climate change, migration, human rights, and globalization. He has said that his “work is motivated by a triple concern: to understand the present world, to understand what it means to be human, and to help bring abo...
Archaeology from Above: New Research in Remote Sensing
Переглядів 50Рік тому
Archaeology from Above: New Research in Remote Sensing
Excavation of Oxford University's 'Lost' College - Talk by Ben Ford
Переглядів 51Рік тому
Excavation of Oxford University's 'Lost' College - Talk by Ben Ford
Two Small Boats - Talk by Damian Robinson
Переглядів 51Рік тому
Two Small Boats - Talk by Damian Robinson
Early Agriculture and (In)equality in Western Eurasia with Amy Bogaard
Переглядів 122Рік тому
Early Agriculture and (In)equality in Western Eurasia with Amy Bogaard
Minding Matter: Towards a Process Archaeology of the Mind - Talk by Lambros Malafouris
Переглядів 342Рік тому
Minding Matter: Towards a Process Archaeology of the Mind - Talk by Lambros Malafouris
Fernanda Pirie on The Anthropology (and Archaeology) of Law
Переглядів 168Рік тому
Fernanda Pirie on The Anthropology (and Archaeology) of Law
Thomas Eriksen on Nationalism and Climate Change
Переглядів 55Рік тому
Thomas Eriksen on Nationalism and Climate Change

КОМЕНТАРІ

  • @desastralisation
    @desastralisation 18 днів тому

    thanks to ian holder, çatalhöyük reveals fundamental human memories. i fell touched and intrigued. intrigued on a large number of points. onebeing, how and when did the domination/submission game start between man and woman

  • @JamesBlevins0
    @JamesBlevins0 18 днів тому

    Chris Stringer could have said, "I am sorry that Milford Wolpoff has had to endure unwarranted insinuations that he was a racist or was unconsciously providing scientific frameworks for racist ideas, when all he was doing was pointing out now accepted morphological features common to Neanderthals and northern Europeans, using the conventional definition of species. I should have done my best to stop such unjust accusations, and to refocus scientific discussions on evidence and established definitions (without which scientific discourse would degenerate). Now, molecular genetics has clearly shown that the modern humans have evolved with regional influences from older populations throughout Eurasia, just as other species have evolved through admixtures between previously isolated subpopulations. Wolpoff and his colleagues of course recognized that modern 'Out of Africa' humans had replaced most of the genes of archaic populations. For example, D. Serre & Svante Pääbo wrote: Thus, the Neanderthal mtDNA could have been swamped by a continuous influx of modern human mtDNA into the Neanderthal gene pool (Enflo et al., 2001)," citing "Enflo, P., Hawkes, K., Wolpoff, M., 2001. A simple reason why Neanderthal ancestry can be consistent with current DNA information. Am. J. Phys. Anthropol. 114, 62." in Serre, D., Pääbo, S. (2006). The fate of European Neanderthals: results and perspectives from ancient DNA analyses. In: Hublin, JJ., Harvati, K., Harrison, T. (eds) Neanderthals Revisited: New Approaches and Perspectives. Vertebrate Paleobiology and Paleoanthropology. Springer, Dordrecht. doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4020-5121-0_11

  • @aaronlillie2011
    @aaronlillie2011 18 днів тому

    Stanford has been overrun by Woke academics. Hodder is just another sheep following the herd. If it wasn't so fashionable right now to talk about decolonization, I would be a lot less skeptical of it. Certainly, archeologists could be well served by reflecting on the colonial mindset that underlies much of their work.

  • @garyliu6589
    @garyliu6589 23 дні тому

    The fosils across the 200ky time range, where the genomes comparison were obtained, are they of the same species? Is the out of Africa theory concluded by comparing genome of different human species, or by comparing modern human to ancient ape? Given the same result, will you still draw the same conclusion if the comparison is made to, say, a fish, instead of an ape? The out of Africa conclusion is it not based on senseless comparison?

  • @garyliu6589
    @garyliu6589 23 дні тому

    Most specimens found in Africa because it is not developed as compared to the rest of the world, that is it.

  • @garyliu6589
    @garyliu6589 23 дні тому

    OOA is the most stupid hypothesis ever...firstly ape is not human...secondly why all apes are from africa, how about other living things?

  • @garyliu6589
    @garyliu6589 23 дні тому

    Don be silly...look around us today...see anyone or anything seems to be evolved from something else physically? Someone created different living things at different period of earth history...

  • @alxbb2253
    @alxbb2253 Місяць тому

    thank you for your sincerity on the subjet

  • @alec2726
    @alec2726 2 місяці тому

    Yes! Finally, at 10:25mins., someone has the right idea.

  • @Deep.Purple
    @Deep.Purple 2 місяці тому

    Stringer now says that "out of africa" couldn't have happened.. did you read that?

    • @MossyMozart
      @MossyMozart 28 днів тому

      That's not what he says here.

  • @edwardpinder5634
    @edwardpinder5634 2 місяці тому

    I think the guy should introduce his as Professor Chris Stringer, he is an absolute legend!

  • @PaulAlabaster
    @PaulAlabaster 3 місяці тому

    I would love to go exploring, looking for ancient rock art. Yes, please!

  • @rebeccalassbacher5247
    @rebeccalassbacher5247 3 місяці тому

    He is a covid + vax believer, that means he is not able to think logically

  • @olboyhim3371
    @olboyhim3371 3 місяці тому

    All that intelligence and intellectualism and he still shows bias because if primate’s period has its origins in Africa and every lineage has been found there all hypotheses and reason places Africa as the cradle and they still refuse to jus say that homo erectus was the Neanderthal which was still in its monkey phase the world didn’t humanize til homo sapien sapien came out of Africa they still white washing

  • @sonarbangla8711
    @sonarbangla8711 4 місяці тому

    There is only one homo sapien branch of human's out of many branches, because of the evolution of the unique quality of 'meditative wisdom', that evolved as pineal gland. There must be an explanation how homo sapiens perfected this evolution.

  • @garydecad6233
    @garydecad6233 4 місяці тому

    Can we obtain dates of the age range of Homo sapien fossils so we can determine how long older individuals lived vs Neanderthal relatives lived?

  • @garydecad6233
    @garydecad6233 4 місяці тому

    Wonderful lecture. Thank you Dr Stringer

  • @UsefulAlien
    @UsefulAlien 5 місяців тому

    Homosapiens are a syntheticly created species. We do not share YDNA or mtDNA with other homonids. We have no ancestors. There is some species interbreeding for some. We have a weird DNA with some 1000 deletions (edits) compared with other life forms including Genus Pan and at least one extra gene not shared with other forms of life. There was interbreeding, I am 97.3% Homosapien, 2% Neanderthal, 0.3% Denisovan, from my paternal line in western Siberia. IMHO, Denisovan/Homosapien ancestry in northern Philippines is my bet for Australian Aboriginals (with Aboriginal Denisovan residuals of 5 - 7%). Neanderthals went extinct because of us, having bows and arrows was a distinct advantage! Very comprehensive lecture, nicely presented! Thank you!

  • @jaybennett236
    @jaybennett236 5 місяців тому

    Atheist archaeologists love using terms like "suggesting", "most probably", "seem to", "more likely" and even "must have". And then say that evolution is a "fact"! Right.

    • @kusaselihlengubane8984
      @kusaselihlengubane8984 Місяць тому

      It's never wise to use absolute statements. Especially in science.

    • @MossyMozart
      @MossyMozart 28 днів тому

      @jaybennett236 - Attend to @kusaselihlengubane8984 's statement and open your eyes to the fact that there are _BILLIONS_ of pieces of evidence and data that show evolution is conclusive. MANY theists fully support evolution and the geological history of our planet. There is only one small schism that does not, young Earth creationists (YEC). Don't be one of them.

  • @occupiedaustralia9952
    @occupiedaustralia9952 5 місяців тому

    🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣😂😂😂😂😂😂

  • @CRT4Dummies
    @CRT4Dummies 5 місяців тому

    Are we really going on about this 'all humans are one species' nonsense?

    • @JungleJargon
      @JungleJargon 5 місяців тому

      Prove otherwise.

    • @CRT4Dummies
      @CRT4Dummies 5 місяців тому

      @@JungleJargon What criteria do we use for taxonomic classification of species?

    • @CRT4Dummies
      @CRT4Dummies 5 місяців тому

      @@JungleJargon Let's educate ourselves, shall we? How many species of elephant inhabit the world today?

    • @SUPERDAVE-jx8mp
      @SUPERDAVE-jx8mp 3 місяці тому

      Perhaps some of us are unaware that we are on a planet with two different groups of sentient beings. One group is autochthonous ie naturally occurring. The other group suddenly appeared six to ten thousand years ago and is not. Quite simple.

  • @buttercxpdraws8101
    @buttercxpdraws8101 5 місяців тому

    Thanks for actually acknowledging the Australia question so many others ignore!

    • @VaughanMcCue
      @VaughanMcCue 4 місяці тому

      They all walk around the wrong way, and gravity puts their heads under massive blood pressure. That is probably why so many have very red faces and talk funny.

  • @standingbear998
    @standingbear998 5 місяців тому

    setting skulls in a line does not prove anything. similarities between two skulls does not prove one turned into the other. this kind of thing is not science.

  • @zaidalbavlogs3266
    @zaidalbavlogs3266 5 місяців тому

    Commenting for algorithm

    • @JungleJargon
      @JungleJargon 5 місяців тому

      No magical morphing monkeys.

    • @MossyMozart
      @MossyMozart 28 днів тому

      @@JungleJargon - Just the science of evolution here!

    • @JungleJargon
      @JungleJargon 28 днів тому

      @@MossyMozart Evolution isn't science.

  • @buckaroundandfindout
    @buckaroundandfindout 6 місяців тому

    Is any of this in full articulation upon discovery?

    • @JungleJargon
      @JungleJargon 5 місяців тому

      There are absolutely no magical morphing monkeys.

  • @davepx1
    @davepx1 6 місяців тому

    Those population figures again look high: maybe 2-2½ million under Rome and again by 1086, and around 4m c.1300 seems nearer the mark, numbers that are consistent with Prof Hamerow's "long revolution" given that growth must have resumed from the later 7th century. The Domesday acreage conversely looks low, the returns suggesting 6½-8½m acres: the higher figure might conceivably support 3m people at 1300 yields, but Domesday doesn't indicate such a large population even allowing for substantial omission of those not deemed sufficiently relevant to its limited purpose. I don't blame the good Professor whose team can't be expected to excavate the entire country: it's for economic & population historians to do some joined-up thinking to give archaeologists sound aggregates & averages to relate to their findings. An excellent survey of a fascinating project, though, debunking notions of either a stagnant subsistence agriculture or overnight transformation: I hope we get some follow-up studies to draw out more of the detail and variation on top of the already illuminating insights into the chronology of rural change which underpinned everything else and laid the foundations for later prosperity.

  • @gheffz
    @gheffz 6 місяців тому

    BS

    • @JungleJargon
      @JungleJargon 5 місяців тому

      Evolutionism is nonsense.

  • @michaelheaney2701
    @michaelheaney2701 6 місяців тому

    its true what you say but 12 million years before the prehumans were in europe but when the going got tough they went to africa . so its time scales.

    • @JungleJargon
      @JungleJargon 5 місяців тому

      Maybe about 5,000 years to the birth of Noah.

  • @jaysmith6863
    @jaysmith6863 6 місяців тому

    Cool upfront artwork, kudos to the artist who live that long ago who was able to capture the likeness. If you dig up the graveyard in NYC, you will find the same diversity in fossils. Even look at modern day living people, you will see it. Everything from little people to what some might call giants, 8 ft teenagers. Title of video seemed to imply I would have seen some objective evidence of evolution. Guess you missed the largest DNA study ever completed in Human Evolution magazine, 1981 Stoeckle and Thaler. Notice how he uses the words "We dont know", "it seems to be", "maybe", "likely". People critique the date because carbon 14 dating isn't valid past like 50k years. It has shown to also be wildly inaccurate.

  • @Zichronot
    @Zichronot 6 місяців тому

    🐂💩.

    • @JungleJargon
      @JungleJargon 5 місяців тому

      Magical morphing monkeys is nonsense.

  • @JungleJargon
    @JungleJargon 6 місяців тому

    There’s no evolution. Variation isn’t evolution. Denisovans are Hamitic descendants as well as Eurasian. The C and D paternal haplogroups are related to Africans. C is the descendants of the House of Nimrod and D is a Canaanite tribe. Neanderthals are Eurasians.

  • @soulsuz1974
    @soulsuz1974 6 місяців тому

    Wonderful insights, especially to topics generally overlooked by the archaeology society.

  • @rogerrowles8702
    @rogerrowles8702 6 місяців тому

    When The Smithsonian , Whips Out The Red- Haired(Mostly Male) NEPHILIM( Double Rows Of Teeth,etc) I Know They R Serious! The Catalina Islands Ones & South Point Ohio, Etc Ones , Too.. 😜🖖 😉

    • @JungleJargon
      @JungleJargon 5 місяців тому

      Well, as long as it is human it doesn’t matter.

  • @Joel-ho8xx
    @Joel-ho8xx 6 місяців тому

    Nothing human has ever came out of Africa..

    • @JungleJargon
      @JungleJargon 5 місяців тому

      Humans live in Africa so they probably came out of Africa.

  • @RodCalidge
    @RodCalidge 6 місяців тому

    You forgot impossible in your title. Dna mutations do not occur because the animal "wants" to become something else. Birth defects usually lead to death, not healthy propagation.

  • @tobywestfall2970
    @tobywestfall2970 7 місяців тому

    Knowing how we are today i'm sure we wiped out the neanderthals

    • @JungleJargon
      @JungleJargon 5 місяців тому

      They seemed to have a problem with genetic entropy.

  • @zacharywatson5531
    @zacharywatson5531 7 місяців тому

    Organized competitive carnivores jacked with promiscuous stamina and ego or maybe we were blissfully one with nature pure harmonious group who lucked into some spot that barely gifted us survival.. sum cataclism resulting bottle neck of genes our new legacy and only card..may have been many near ends to our species these possibly catalized our cross breading behavior. Thus being a mongrel mix of hominid sub species 'that we seem to be..gave us enuf diversity not to have gone the way of our extinct cousins.. luck has nothing to do with it

  • @NyabsinoFyles
    @NyabsinoFyles 7 місяців тому

    Only Homo sapiens Males and Neanderthal females were capable of successfully breeding, and only the male offspring from the admixture were fertile. That explains why no human today possesses the mitochondria DNA from their Neanderthal mothers. These were two separate species, though in the same genus Homo, the Y chromosomes were not fully compatible. Homo Sapiens females would simply miscarry the pregnancy or the hybrid baby would have died after birth. That contributed to their extinction.

  • @Notmehimorthem
    @Notmehimorthem 7 місяців тому

    It seems to me that all ancestors would have interbred if given the opportunity.

    • @CRT4Dummies
      @CRT4Dummies 5 місяців тому

      yeah, naw😂

    • @MossyMozart
      @MossyMozart 28 днів тому

      @Notmehimorthem - Would *you* have gotten cozy with an Erectus or Chimpanzee female?

  • @johnwinward2421
    @johnwinward2421 7 місяців тому

    I am thinking of doing a course on Evolution of Human ehaviour at Ox.

  • @ClimateScepticSceptic-ub2rg
    @ClimateScepticSceptic-ub2rg 7 місяців тому

    I will get hold of Patricia's book. I read Diamond's books and thought them gripping, but also glib, shallow and in some cases positively wrong. It is diagnostic that he took offence. A true academic would have engaged constructively. A self-publicist would have been defensive. We can draw our own conclusions.

  • @msr305
    @msr305 7 місяців тому

    I highly respect Professor Stringer says that he 'used' to believe such & such way, but is now considering new theories. The excitement in human evolution is new data and new implications!

    • @irisschneider4058
      @irisschneider4058 3 місяці тому

      And this IS a basic tenet of science. He’s not a big laudable exception adhering to that principle when he’s considering a new hypothesis.

  • @AndreyBogoslowskyNewYorkCity
    @AndreyBogoslowskyNewYorkCity 7 місяців тому

    I speak and read Polish I lived in Poland for eight years, and I have many friends in my opinion there’s Amber bear is a fake. I am a very skillful faker in high school I was making fake Byzantium icons and making some good money with it. The article doesn’t describe, the circumstances of those artifacts by the way, there are many many artifacts in this article but thank you for this reference #Bogoslowsky 🦁🤴

  • @shiftybroccoli8891
    @shiftybroccoli8891 7 місяців тому

    40000 year old Neanderthal painting records the generations of Noah in lines of dots in Spain

    • @user-hs4ti2dg6l
      @user-hs4ti2dg6l 6 місяців тому

      This is dishonest creationist drivel, of course. Noah is a mythical character, invented tens of thousands of years after Neandertal extinction.

  • @ClimateScepticSceptic-ub2rg
    @ClimateScepticSceptic-ub2rg 8 місяців тому

    Always like seeing basic questions answered.

  • @nukhetyavuz
    @nukhetyavuz 8 місяців тому

    sir,thank u for the pre greek and roman thing and dna...please continue...we would also want their dna from all the bones that were analyzed...i heard 800 bones samples were taken,200 given back...if this is true,dont we deserve an info about dna and our ancestors haplogroups?and announced into the world?johannes krause,swante pablo should contribute this as well,or maybe they already have studied the bones and taken samples...why this silence?its hightime,we and the world are informed about this...

  • @user-ri1ti6go7s
    @user-ri1ti6go7s 8 місяців тому

    Much more complex than we imagine and will get more so I think. Thank you for your hard work Dr. Stringer

  • @bobwilson7684
    @bobwilson7684 8 місяців тому

    it is difficult to any logic, putting together so many different cultures so far distanced, but all building the same impossible structures, especialy when if you include all the dolmens found all over eurasia, Korea is full of them, for some reason this investigation is omiting all that completely, even in India are dolmens, and in Korea there is one atop a pyramid...

  • @AndreyBogoslowskyNewYorkCity
    @AndreyBogoslowskyNewYorkCity 8 місяців тому

    Having Neanderthal DNA in me was noticed by the dentists 30 years ago, telling me my front teeth have a thicker basin. 20 years ago, a nose doctor told me my nose cavities are huge… like cathedral in Kolon. I have resistance to viruses, including HIV and Covid. I got infected many times, but I had only slight fever unnoticeable. I also hibernate in the winter and gain weight from eating too much. But in the summertime I work a lot physically with my big and heavy artwork over 30 pounds each juggling like in a circus. I can loose 30 lbs in few weeks. Skin is hanging. My testicles are size of chicken eggs. I don’t know if this will help you in your research. Bogoslowsky My genetic descendants, all come from the region of river Volga in Russia from today’s Volgograd, a.k.a., Stalingrad and Saratov . The area called the great steps of Russia. Everyone in my family is over 6 foot tall, blonde, blue eyes, and the redheads. But not me. My mother’s father was Ukrainian from Don river region . I have no allergies to milk I am addicted to warm goat 🐐 milk and sourdough bread.

    • @badfairy9554
      @badfairy9554 7 місяців тому

      I do not remmenber where I heard it that people with Neanderthals DNA where not doing well with covid, more deadly to them.

    • @badfairy9554
      @badfairy9554 7 місяців тому

      Today I found out that some Neanerthals had red hair and freckles.

    • @AndreyBogoslowskyNewYorkCity
      @AndreyBogoslowskyNewYorkCity 7 місяців тому

      @@badfairy9554 In “Tibetan book of the dead”, composed by Buddhist monk in the 12th century one particular concept is explored repeatedly. The concept of “in between”. Between one state of the mind, and the next level of consciousness. In general, the book is an instruction manual on -“how to behave after physical death”. “Tibetan book of the dead” is a daily instructions for a proper behavior in Tibetan society. I feel my life is constantly in between. I feel yesterday is miles away, and there is an infinite abyss between now and the future. I feel I am riding a horse with two, or three spare horses behind. It was a dream I had when I was a teenager. I remember this dream 🛌 Sleeping is my favorite thing to do after boiling, hot Jacuzzi outdoors in the freezing winter. #Bogoslowsky 🦁🤴 #bogoslowskyfunpage #bogoslowskyartschool #twomenfightingtrend #cactusia #gravitationalism #yonification #Богословский .

    • @HoboHabilis
      @HoboHabilis 23 дні тому

      TMI brah

  • @AndreyBogoslowskyNewYorkCity
    @AndreyBogoslowskyNewYorkCity 8 місяців тому

    Life-changing experiences happened in my life without my brightest intentions, and certainly without any expectations. The list is long starting from how I immigrate it to US, or even earlier how I bought a silly machine to make wood stretchers, but I didn’t know how to work it. A year later I made good money with two employees. I purchased my first real state at age 17, all by accident (not intended). Nearly every day I notice in my #artstudio fortunate/unfortunate accidents happen. I pick up the #idea (from observation)and develop it into a #newtechnology .For instance, my “visible invisible”. Parts of the painting visible only with the flash of the camera. I’m getting a patent on it. Recently, I discovered by burning sued I can use it to create enigmatic images as independent elements within a #painting, or completely independent visions drawings, with a little help of charcoal afterwards. #Mendeleev discovered his/ours table of elements by playing cards. #Archimedes shamelessly run around Syracuse naked screaming Eureka. A few minutes earlier he discovered one of the principles of physics. Artistic #genius is unexplained. As a Russian poet Alexander #Pushkin said it very nicely: .”- and genius is the workings of a #paradox ( И #гений парадоксов труд).” #Bogoslowsky .🦁🤴