Lehre

Die Professoren und Wissenschaftler der Marinen Geodynamik halten im Rahmen des BSc Studiengangs Physik des Erdsystems und in den MSc Studiengängen Master of Geophysics und Master of Marine Geosciences Vorlesungen. Mehr Informationen finden Sie hierzu auf den Webseiten der Christian-Albrechts-Universität zu Kiel. Wir betreuen außerdem Abschlussarbeiten (BSc, MSc und Dr. rer. nat.). Bei Interesse wenden Sie sich bitte an den jeweiligen Dozenten oder im Zweifel an Heidrun Kopp (hkopp(at)geomar.de) oder Christian Berndt (cberndt(at)geomar.de).

UnivIS
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Semester: SS 2024 

Archäologisches Kolloquium (200411)

Dozentinnen/Dozenten
Prof. Dr. phil. Johannes Müller, Prof. Dr. phil. Ulrich Müller, Prof. Dr. Wiebke Kirleis, Prof. Dr. Cheryl Makarewicz, Prof. Dr. phil. Martin Furholt, Prof. Dr. Oliver Nakoinz

Angaben
Kolloquium, Teil des Moduls Iv2 (TN an mind. 5 Vorträgen, Protokoll, 5,5 LP)
Zeit und Ort: n.V.
Bemerkung zu Zeit und Ort: JMS4 - R.28 / Termine am Aushang


Forschungskolloquium für Examenskandidaten IV: Archäozoologie (200397)

Dozent/in
Prof. Dr. Cheryl Makarewicz

Angaben
Kolloquium, 1 SWS, Teil des Moduls Iv1
Zeit und Ort: n.V.


Stable Isotopes in Archaeology (200503)

Dozent/in
Prof. Dr. Cheryl Makarewicz

Angaben
Übung, 2 SWS, Teil der Module Cg2, Cv2, Dg1, Dv1, Dg2, Dv2
Zeit und Ort: Mi 15:15 - 16:45, JMS4-R28b/c
vom 8.5.2024 bis zum 10.7.2024
Bemerkung zu Zeit und Ort: UE überwiegend online

Inhalt
Stable isotopes in ancient bones, teeth, and charred seeds record a rich record of human diet and mobility, plant and animal husbandry practices, and environmental signatures. This course provides an overview of some of the more commonly used isotopes (carbon, nitrogen, oxygen, and strontium) used in archaeology to trace the evolution of a variety of human behaviors and establish the ecological contexts in which these activities took place. We will focus on the foundational concepts in stable isotope systematics and discuss their archaeological applications, and also touch upon the use of isotopes in organic residue analyis and paleoenvironmentalreconstruction. This course will also examine the biological properties of archaeological tissues of interest that provide a scaffold for gaining multi-scalar insights into past human activity. Students will also be introduced to the Archaeology Stable Isotope Laboratory which supports the full complement of scientific instrumentation needed for the preparation of ancient bone, teeth, and seed samples as well as isotope ratio mass spectrometers, infrared spectrometers, and other large instrumentation.

Course goals and objectives. At the end of this course, you will be able to:
  • Explain isotope systematics for carbon, nitrogen, oxygen, and strontium
  • Describe how these isotopes are influenced by environmental variables and organism physiology
  • Define both ecological and archaeological questions that can be addressed using stable isotope analyses.
  • Link isotope data measured from ancient tissues to ‘Grand Challenges in Archaeology’
  • Critically evaluate conclusions derived from archaeological isotopic data sets and communicate your findings through oral presentation

Zusätzliche Informationen
www: https://lms.uni-kiel.de/url/RepositoryEntry/5493031023


The Archaeology of Southwest Asia (200515)

Dozent/in
Prof. Dr. Cheryl Makarewicz

Angaben
Vorlesung, 2 SWS, Teil der Module Bg1, Bv1, Gg1, Gv1
Zeit und Ort: Di 11:15 - 12:45, JMS4-R28b/c (außer Di 30.4.2024)
vom 30.4.2024 bis zum 9.7.2024
Bemerkung zu Zeit und Ort: VL überwiegend online

Inhalt
The Near East witnessed major developments in human (pre)history, including the origins of food production and village life, the development of symbolic behaviour into formalised religion, and the establishment of city-states and empires. In this lecture course, we will will investigate Natufian hunter-gatherer communities and their sedentization, multi-centered plant and animal domestication processes, elaborate mortuary practices that held together early Neolithic societies, the interaction sphere of early farming villages and the first forays of pastoralists into challenging steppe and desert environments. This course will also examine nascent craft specialization and prestige-building in organizing Chalcolithic societies, the rise of surplus production, exchange systems, and hierarchies associated with urbanisation, and the rise of Bronze Age city-states and Iron Age polities that established transregional political networks and codified law systems.

Zusätzliche Informationen
www: https://lms.uni-kiel.de/url/RepositoryEntry/5493031022

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