22 search results for “prehistoric cyprus” in the Staff website
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Jaris DarwinFaculty of Archaeology
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DNA study reveals remarkable stability in prehistoric Low Countries populations
For thousands of years, the prehistoric communities of the Low Countries followed their own path, compared with the rest of Europe. An international research team has now published these findings in Nature.
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Bleda DüringFaculty of Archaeology
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Victor KlinkenbergFaculty of Archaeology
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Jack TillmanFaculty of Archaeology
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Maria HadjigavrielFaculty of Archaeology
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Max Willem LenssenFaculty of Archaeology
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Four Leiden researchers receive ERC Advanced Grant
From social inequalities in prehistory to placebo effects in medical treatments. Four researchers from Leiden University have been awarded a prestigious ERC Advanced Grant worth EUR 2.5 million to develop their research.
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Azra Say OtunFaculty of Archaeology
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Donna de GroeneFaculty of Archaeology
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Corrie BakelsFaculty of Archaeology
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Erasmus+ for Training
PhD, Staff
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Skeletons and beer at ArcheoHotspot
How can you figure out if a skeleton is male or female? How did they brew beer in the distant past? Visitors to ArcheoHotspot could examine archaeological finds and taste prehistoric drinks at the Faculty of Archaeology.
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Erasmus+ for Teaching Assignments
PhD, Staff
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Erasmus+ for Studies
Bachelor, Master
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Hoe ontstonden handelsnetwerken in het derde millennium voor Christus?
Grondstoffen werden vroeger over duizenden kilometers afstand vervoerd. Waarvoor werden ze geruild en waarom sloten mensen in West-Azië zich aan bij deze handelsnetwerken?
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Early hunter-gatherers reshaped Europe’s ecosystems long before agriculture
In a new study published in PLOS One, Leiden archaeologist Anastasia Nikulina, together with an international team from France, Denmark, the United Kingdom and the Netherlands, challenges the long-held belief that early humans had minimal impact on their environment before the rise of farming.
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Ann BrysbaertFaculty of Archaeology
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Erasmus+ for Traineeships
Bachelor, Master
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Scientific breakthrough: evidence that Neanderthals hunted giant elephants
Neanderthals were able to outwit straight-tusked elephants, the largest land mammals of the past few million years. Leiden professor Wil Roebroeks has published an article about this together with his German colleague Sabine Gaudzinski-Windheuser in the Science Advances journal.
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Peter AkkermansFaculty of Archaeology