Palaeotrails
@palaeotrails.bsky.social
360 followers 490 following 52 posts
Palaeoanthropology research group led by @martamlahr.bsky.social combining multiple projects that investigate human evolution, largely focused in the Turkana Basin. Administered by the Ng'ipalajem team
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palaeotrails.bsky.social
What does the Ng'ipalajem team do?

Ng’ipalajem, meaning Ancestors in Turkana, is an ERC-funded project.

Led by @martamlahr.bsky.social, the project investigates how the emergence of Homo sapiens is deeply intertwined with Africa’s long-term environmental and ecological history.

#humanevolution
We spend long periods of time in Kenya collecting data in the collections, understanding the landscape and looking for fossils. 

Picture credits: Sarah Paris The rest of the year is spent analysing data, honing skills and preparing for upcoming field work. During this time, we develop new methodologies, attend conferences, write papers and discuss our findings

Picture credits: Sarah Paris, Eleanor Williams
palaeotrails.bsky.social
We are hiring a Project Co-ordinator! 🚨

Are you extremely organised with great interpersonal skills?
Able to multitask efficiently?
Interested in African prehistory?
Keen to work with an enthusiastic team?
We want to hear from you!

Closing date: 17 October, 2025
Project Coordinator (Fixed Term)
Applications are invited for a 12-month Project Co-ordinator position on the NG'IPALAJEM project, funded by the ERC. The project aims at collecting new palaeontological, archaeological and geological
www.cam.ac.uk
Reposted by Palaeotrails
martamlahr.bsky.social
Like you, I've read so many nice things about Jane Goodall's amazing life and legacy today, but this video of the realease of the chimp called Wounda is beyond words ♥️

If only we could find the will to stop destroying the extraordinary natural world around us...

youtu.be/ClOMa_GufsA?...
Wounda's Journey - Jane Goodall Witnesses Release of Chimpanzee Into New Island Sanctuary Site
YouTube video by Dr. Jane Goodall & the Jane Goodall Institute USA
youtu.be
Reposted by Palaeotrails
palaeotrails.bsky.social
It's a wrap! #ESHE2025
3 days filled with stimulating discussions in the form of 35 podiums, 33 Pecha Kuchas, 169 posters.
Congratulations to the winners of the student prize - Harmony Hill & Gabriele Russo!
Massive thank you to the organisers for making it all happen.

See you in Burgos next year!
palaeotrails.bsky.social
It's a wrap! #ESHE2025
3 days filled with stimulating discussions in the form of 35 podiums, 33 Pecha Kuchas, 169 posters.
Congratulations to the winners of the student prize - Harmony Hill & Gabriele Russo!
Massive thank you to the organisers for making it all happen.

See you in Burgos next year!
palaeotrails.bsky.social
Session 9 Podium #ESHE2025

@stephanepeyregne.bsky.social on a new Denisovan genome,
J. Kubat uncovers sexing and phylogeny of M. palaeojavanicus,
E. Veatch reconsiders fire use and behaviour in H. floresiensis,
H. Berghuis on the first subsea H. erectus site in Sundaland
palaeotrails.bsky.social
Podium Day 3 #ESHE2025

H. Farrell, R. Sorrentino, C. Ruff, A. Toccacceli, R. Clarke, A. Robles on the architecture of human foot, gait in Dmanisi, dexterous rock climbing in chimps, craniofacial diversity in great apes and so much more!
palaeotrails.bsky.social
Poster Session 2 #ESHE2025

83 wonderful posters. 169 in total.

Palaeotrails’ Jesse Martin & @martamlahr.bsky.social on detecting microevolutionary trends in fossil hominin populations.
palaeotrails.bsky.social
Podium talks Day 2 #ESHE2025

@jingzhang.bsky.social, K. Bretzke, G. Duller, @armandofalcucci.bsky.social, @giuliagallo.bsky.social, @jonathanreeves.bsky.social present exciting research on AI refits for lithics, use of operculum to push the limits of OSL, fire durations in the MP and so much more!
Reposted by Palaeotrails
martamlahr.bsky.social
#ESHE2025
posting on Pecha Kuchas is hard 😅😅😅!
palaeotrails.bsky.social
First round of podium presentations at #ESHE2025

Olivia Rivero, Alba Mesa, April Nowell,
@aurelienmounier.bsky.social, Chris Hunt explore everything from cognitive complexity, aDNA in cave art to the lives of teens in the #Palaeolithic and the amazing discoveries at #Shanidar!

Stay tuned!
Reposted by Palaeotrails
martamlahr.bsky.social
#ESHE2025
Introduction by @mariesoressi.bsky.social – 14 years of ESHE! 340 participants in Paris 😊!
Welcome by MNHN, hosting: info on major cyber-attack in July, and how challenging it was to organise the meeting (thank you Paris team!!), thanking a number of supporting & funding institutions.
palaeotrails.bsky.social
Celebrating our wonderful PI @martamlahr.bsky.social for such an incredible achievement 🎉🍾🥂
palaeotrails.bsky.social
Justus Erus Edung was only 25 years old when he discovered Kenyanthropus platyops in a team led by Prof. Meave Leakey in 1999.

This 3.5 million year old “flat-faced” skull quickly grabbed international headlines and changed the course of human evolution.

#fossils #turkana #humanevolution
palaeotrails.bsky.social
Had such a fun time learning about species identification, phylogeny and palaeoecology with @deadbovids.bsky.social 🤩🤩
deadbovids.bsky.social
38 trays, 722 specimens, and 31 species of elephant, rhino, hippo, rodent, pig, monkey, horse, buffalo, and antelope teeth and horns later, I can finally wrap up the first project I'm working on this summer in Kenya with @palaeotrails.bsky.social and the Ng'ipalajem project!
palaeotrails.bsky.social
Episode 2: Faunal identification with @deadbovids.bsky.social

Other than identification, tooth wear pattern can give us exciting insights into faunal diet and palaeoecology.
palaeotrails.bsky.social
The joy of sorting LSA lithics from Turkana under the guidance of @robfoley.bsky.social

Follow us on Instagram for more www.instagram.com/palaeotrails...
palaeotrails.bsky.social
What does the Ng'ipalajem team do?

Ng’ipalajem, meaning Ancestors in Turkana, is an ERC-funded project.

Led by @martamlahr.bsky.social, the project investigates how the emergence of Homo sapiens is deeply intertwined with Africa’s long-term environmental and ecological history.

#humanevolution
We spend long periods of time in Kenya collecting data in the collections, understanding the landscape and looking for fossils. 

Picture credits: Sarah Paris The rest of the year is spent analysing data, honing skills and preparing for upcoming field work. During this time, we develop new methodologies, attend conferences, write papers and discuss our findings

Picture credits: Sarah Paris, Eleanor Williams
palaeotrails.bsky.social
📢 We’re HIRING!

Are you experienced in 3D imaging and geometric
morphometric analysis? Do you have strong organisational and communication skills?

We want to hear from you! Apply below www.jobs.cam.ac.uk/job/51730/

Join our passionate research team exploring Pleistocene African prehistory! 🦴
Research Assistant in the Ng'ipalajem Project (digital) (fixed-term) - Job Opportunities - University of Cambridge
Research Assistant in the Ng'ipalajem Project (digital) (fixed-term) in the McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research at the University of Cambridge.
www.jobs.cam.ac.uk
palaeotrails.bsky.social
🎉 Fantastic new book by Jonathan R. Goodman Invisible Rivals: How we evolved to compete in a cooperative world’ forward by Palaeotrails @robfoley.bsky.social
cam-archaeology.bsky.social
Cambridge Archaeology graduate Jonathan R. Goodman has published a book: 'Invisible Rivals: How We Evolved to Compete in a Cooperative World'.

Available to purchase from Yale University Press: yalebooks.co.uk/book/9780300...
Invisible Rivals: How We Evolved to Compete in a Cooperative World
palaeotrails.bsky.social
🚨 More below!!

At Khok Phanom Di, red ochre pigment was applied to most burials. Infants who died around the time of birth were excluded. And yet, they were still buried in the same sacred ground.

What does this tell us about how ancient communities perceived personhood, grief, and belonging?
Ochre and Identity: An Exploration of Perinatal Mortality, Personhood and Social Acknowledgement at Khok Phanom Di, Central Thailand | Cambridge Archaeological Journal | Cambridge Core
Ochre and Identity: An Exploration of Perinatal Mortality, Personhood and Social Acknowledgement at Khok Phanom Di, Central Thailand
www.cambridge.org
palaeotrails.bsky.social
🚨 New research by Palaeotrails' @sarah-paris.bsky.social
beautifully connects Neolithic infant burials in Thailand with today’s evolving conversations around perinatal loss.

"This isn't just about pigment—it's about belonging."

From ancient ochre to Ronaldo's 7th-minute tribute—grief unites. 🕊️
What Ancient Burials Can Teach Us About Grief: New Study Links Prehistoric Thai Cemetery to Today’s Perinatal Loss Conversations
www.arch.cam.ac.uk