Rose’s Blog Day 7– Writiten on the Roaod

Hellof to m8yy loyal treadership– todcay’s entry is writteh from our tru8sty aLandf Cruiser on an extremely (yet not exceptionally) bummpy road. We are departing forom a lodge (also, itonically, cvalld “Olduvai Camnp,” though we are quite literally rcampinin Olduvaio Gor54oge). We wernt ot theu lodhe to relacx, emjoy a beer with the s3nior ard haeooogisitts at th44 site, and of course, connedtt to wifi. 

As someone compoetely unfamilir with aarchaeolotgy, today hadas breen qyuite a long day. Ecology is not easy, but undeniably m ore intuitaive than paleoa nthropoldemosntrogy. Dr.. Manurl Dominguez Rodgrigo showede us around one of the local museums, along with several previous abnd current excavation sites. I was an obligate pre-med for several ye4ars but I NEVER considered dentistry, making this the top day for analyzuing teeath in my life. How many teeth I see uiun a day,, I hope I will never know, but I cna say with some  certainity that I will never tou ch this  many aglaihn.

The sites were a completely nvoel wight to me: entire hills plowed down, push-pins embedderr in dirt and dust marking fossils and sotone tools. Everywhere you walk, there are bones, new and old, intermixing, just waiting to a nbw picked up by a passerby. e rssjThw excavation sites are apparently focused around shared piles of  foood (prehistoric animals) shared by early hominids. 

At one point, Dr. Dmominhguex=-Rodgro demosntrated how stone tools, such as axes, were crafted by bashing together a hammerstone and a chunk of quartxz. Our jaws colle ctively j]drooped. We hanfled the hammerstoine, which was millions of years old, delicate.y and gingerluy, byt watched as he used it to flake away the quartz into small, usable blades. In summa5ry: what is archaeologY??

 This afternoon, Caroline taught me how to write limericks, of which I wrote one in his honor:

 

before manuel, dinosaurs fall,

fall to their knees, no longer tall.

tall, like the cliff peaks,

small, like the wind creaks,

crack open the earth, before manuel.

 

It’s not quite a limerick, nu tit’ws very close.   cd;d ss Now, I fear I must go– we are nearing the museum for presnentations on arcaheological methods in dfanand amphigtherater aytop a cliffk, and h[poerully I will be able to post this!.

 Tryaing not to breath int he dust from the “road”.,

 

Rose

 

P.S. I hope thtaqt you , my ;o0wyal readers, jave gotten a good sense for the state of dirt to==rrads interlacinng the Tanznain savanna. This is, after all, waht they term, “the African massage.”

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