The American Research Center in Egypt, Northern
California Chapter, and the Near Eastern Studies
Department, University of California, Berkeley, invite
you to attend a virtual lecture by Dr. Brenda J. Baker, Arizona State University:
Living and Dying in Ancient Nubia
When:
Sunday,
January 9,
2022, 3 PM
Pacific Time
Zoom
Lecture. A
registration
link will be
automatically
sent to
ARCE-NC
members.
Non-members
may request a
registration
link by
sending email
with your name
and email
address to
arcencZoom@gmail.com.
Attendance is
limited, so
non-members,
please send
any
registration
requests no
later than
Friday, January 7.
Glenn Meyer
ARCE-NC
Publicity
Director
About the
Lecture:
The project area for the
Bioarchaeology of Nubia Expedition (BONE) lies between
the fourth and fifth cataracts of the Nile River in
northern Sudan. During six seasons of fieldwork,
multiple cemeteries were excavated, spanning from the
Kerma through Christian periods (c. 2500 BCE to 1400
CE). Analyses of the graves and the individuals they
contain reveal previously unrecognized aspects of
funerary practices and lived experiences of the people
who inhabited this area. Recent research includes
evaluation of evidence that graves were re-entered
within memory of a person’s death to retrieve
heirlooms rather than looted without regard for the
deceased. Analyses of stable isotopes reveal
substantial residential mobility and interconnections
in the earliest periods, and a dietary shift between
the Post-Meroitic and Christian periods that
accompanies major changes in grave style and
accompaniments. Grooves in teeth provide new evidence
for use of toothpicks in this region as far back as
2200 BCE. Spatial and social organization of the
largest cemetery—the Qinifab School site—is
demonstrated through biodistance analysis.
Additionally, indicators of disease and trauma in the
skeletons reveal life histories and the experiences of
specific individuals in different eras, such as a
potter with silicosis and a massive teratoma in her
abdomen, a mother and baby who died during a breech
delivery, a man who died after fractures to all bones
of his right leg began to heal, and an older woman who
survived numerous traumatic injuries.
About
the Speaker:
Brenda
J. Baker is Associate Professor of Anthropology
and Curator of Nubian Collections in the Center for
Bioarchaeological Research, School of Human Evolution
and Social Change, at Arizona State University. She is
also Director of the ASU
Bioarchaeology of Nubia Expedition (BONE). As a
bioarchaeologist, her research integrates archaeology
and biological anthropology to investigate the lifeways
of past people, particularly in the Nile Valley, Cyprus,
and the US. Dr. Baker is a founding co-editor of Bioarchaeology
International and serves on the advisory board of
the American-Sudanese Archaeological Research Center
(AmSARC) and the new Journal of Egyptian Heritage.
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