Radio Blue Heart is on the air!

unified-multiversal-theory:

catchester:

pbrim:

whatevercomestomymind:

stuff-n-n0nsense:

assasue:

saxifraga-x-urbium:

systlin:

Something I find incredibly cool is that they’ve found neandertal bone tools made from polished rib bones, and they couldn’t figure out what they were for for the life of them. 

Until, of course, they showed it to a traditional leatherworker and she took one look at it and said “Oh yeah sure that’s a leather burnisher, you use it to close the pores of leather and work oil into the hide to make it waterproof. Mine looks just the same.” 

“Wait you’re still using the exact same fucking thing 50,000 years later???”

Well, yeah. We’ve tried other things. Metal scratches up and damages the hide. Wood splinters and wears out. Bone lasts forever and gives the best polish. There are new, cheaper plastic ones, but they crack and break after a couple years. A bone polisher is nearly indestructible, and only gets better with age. The more you use a bone polisher the better it works.”

It’s just. 

50,000 years. 50,000. And over that huge arc of time, we’ve been quietly using the exact same thing, unchanged, because we simply haven’t found anything better to do the job. 

i also like that this is a “ask craftspeople” thing, it reminds me of when art historians were all “the fuck” about someone’s ear “deformity” in a portrait and couldn’t work out what the symbolism was until someone who’d also worked as a piercer was like “uhm, he’s fucked up a piercing there”. interdisciplinary shit also needs to include non-academic approaches because crafts & trades people know shit ok

One of my professors often tells us about a time he, as and Egyptian Archaeologist, came down upon a ring of bricks one brick high. In the middle of a house. He and his fellow researchers could not fpr the life of them figure out what tf it could possibly have been for. Until he decided to as a laborer, who doesnt even speak English, what it was. The guy gestures for my prof to follow him, and shows him the same ring of bricks in a nearby modern house. Said ring is filled with baby chicks, while momma hen is out in the yard having a snack. The chicks can’t get over the single brick, but mom can step right over. Over 2000 years and their still corraling chicks with brick circles. If it aint broke, dont fix it and always ask the locals.

I read something a while back about how pre-columbian Americans had obsidian blades they stored in the rafters of their houses. The archaeologists who discovered them came to the conclusion that the primitive civilizations believed keeping them closer to the sun would keep the blades sharper.

Then a mother looked at their findings and said “yeah, they stored their knives in the rafters to keep them out of reach of the children.”

Omg the ancient child proofing add on tho lol

I remember years ago on a forum (email list, that’s how old) a woman talking about going to a museum, and seeing among the women’s household objects a number of fired clay items referred to as “prayer objects”.  (Apparently this sort of labeling is not uncommon when you have something that every house has and appears to be important, but no-one knows what it is.)  She found a docent and said, “Excuse me, but I think those are drop spindles.”  “Why would you think that, ma’am?”  “Because they look just like the ones my husband makes for me.  See?”  They got all excited, took tons of pictures and video of her spinning with her spindle.  When she was back in the area a few years later, they were still on display, but labeled as drop spindles.

image

So ancient Roman statues have some really weird hairstyles. Archaeologists just couldn’t figure them out. They didn’t have hairspray or modern hair bands, or elastic at all, but some of these things defied gravity better than Marge Simpson’s beehive.

image

Eventually they decided, wigs. Must be wigs. Or maybe hats. Definitely not real hair.

A hairdresser comes a long, looks at a few and is like, “Yeah, they’re sewn.”

“Don’t be silly!” the archaeologists cry. “How foolish, sewn hair indeed! LOL!”

So she went away and recreated them on real people using a needle and thread and the mystery of Roman hairstyles was solved.

image
image
image

She now works as a hair archaeologist and I believe she has a YouTube channel now where she recreates forgotten hairstyles, using only what they had available at the time.

Where’s that “grandma solves mystery of the Roman dodecahedron” post when I need it?

(Solution: they’re were knotting looms for making the fingers of gloves and other narrow things.)

  1. offisirguardianbear reblogged this from domhnull1559 and added:
    In NY State Museum in Albany NY, in the Native American display there is a small stone rectangle marked as an ‘unknown...
  2. ugheden reblogged this from pav0-ocellus
  3. inkblotswirl reblogged this from pav0-ocellus
  4. pav0-ocellus reblogged this from captaintiny
  5. gancanagh reblogged this from youlighttheskyfanfiction
  6. poison-perfection reblogged this from shanastoryteller
  7. softneomirotic reblogged this from labseraph
  8. labseraph reblogged this from frustratedferret
  9. heyimanerd reblogged this from myloveformcrwillneverdie
  10. frenemyace reblogged this from bumblebeesinthetrees
  11. vikslamp reblogged this from whooliganshenanigans
  12. melted-icecream-cone reblogged this from brattyhalfpint
  13. brattyhalfpint reblogged this from semsei
  14. shapelessamalgamationofanxiety reblogged this from jazzapples3
  15. jazzapples3 reblogged this from youlighttheskyfanfiction
  16. justhere4thevibez reblogged this from dauntlessdiva
  17. skirris reblogged this from antmarco
  18. jupiterflower16 reblogged this from capillaries-burst-from-boredom
  19. ilovemykpopblog2 reblogged this from aussiebibliophile
  20. hello-leeanne123 reblogged this from demonicsymphony
  21. chthoniccakewalk reblogged this from causalityparadoxes
  22. aussiebibliophile reblogged this from homeinabookshelf
  23. dream-realms reblogged this from rivercityrabbitsbro
  24. antmarco reblogged this from rivercityrabbitsbro
  25. aimorker reblogged this from homeinabookshelf
  26. semsei reblogged this from youlighttheskyfanfiction
  27. rivercityrabbitsbro reblogged this from jagged1
  28. preciouscommoditybears reblogged this from youlighttheskyfanfiction
  29. systlin posted this