Webinar to Talk About “Origins of Coastal Adaptations”

This webinar is part of the “ICArEHB Dialogues” cycle and will be held in English

Photos: Elisabete Rodrigues | Sul Informação - File

“Origins of Coastal Adaptations” is the theme of the webinar to be held on May 21, at 16 pm, organized by the Interdisciplinary Center for Archeology and Evolution of Human Behavior (ICArEHB) of the University of Algarve (UAlg). 

The initiative will take place on the Zoom platform, with speakers Klervia Jaouen (Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique) and Erich Fisher (ICArEHB), moderated by Vera Aldeias (ICArEHB).

This webinar is part of the “ICArEHB Dialogues” cycle and will be held in English.

Klervia Jaouen is a researcher at the Center National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Department of Geosciences and Environment (Géosciences Environnement Toulouse – GET), at the Midi Pyrénées Observatory in Toulouse, where he currently coordinates a program dedicated to the use of new isotopic tools for tracking the onset of fish consumption among hominids.

Erich Fisher recently joined the ICArEHB. He specializes in African prehistoric archaeoinformatics and archeology and his research focuses mainly on the role of coastlines and coastal resources in the survival of the first humans and their movements out of Africa. He has over 20 years of international archaeological experience and nearly 15 years of working experience in Africa.

ICArEHB researchers are dedicated to uncovering human histories from the beginning of our species to the emergence of complex societies.

The “ICArEHB Dialogues” was designed to represent the breadth of research that the Center encompasses and to involve researchers and the public from around the world, with the research of leading experts in their fields, whose work fits into the research objectives and themes of the ICArEHB.

Eight researchers were invited, whose fields range from early human evolution to the more recent development of complex societies. Each session will feature a guest and a member of the ICArEHB, with the aim of stimulating dialogue between researchers and providing an opportunity for the scientific community and the public to join the conversation on such relevant topics of human origin.

 



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