The Earliest Farmers of the Caucasus - Kristine Martirosyan-Olshansky and Alan Farahani
The Earliest Farmers of the Caucasus: A View from Masis Blur First lecture in Archaeology of Armenia: Early Settlements, Dragon Stones, and Gods of Urartu Kristine Martirosyan-Olshansky, Postdoctoral Scholar, CIoA, UCLA Alan Farahani, Assistant Professor of Anthropology, UNLV September 16, 2020 This talk is a summary of research conducted at the archaeological site of Masis Blur, an early farming community located in the Ararat plain of Armenia and occupied continuously for nearly a millennium from ca. 6200 cal. BC – 5200 cal. BC. While much is known about how communities in west Asia adopted a farming way of life, much less is known about the Caucasus. The Masis Blur Archaeological Project explores the rhythms of everyday life at the Neolithic village in this understudied region using high resolution techniques to recover, record, and analyse the material remains of day-to-day activities. The talk highlights recent fieldwork and preliminary results from Masis Blur with specific focus on enhanced photographic techniques (photogrammetry), archaeological plant remains , animal husbandry, obsidian procurement, and a few key discoveries such as calcified basket remains, evidence of thatched roofs, and pigment processing workshops which, to date, are singular for the region.

Dragon Stones of Armenia: Recent Research and Protection Works - Arsen Bobokhyan

... what about BONCUKLU TARLA? | Uncovering the real star of Middle Eastern archaeology.

Antonio Sagona and his Contribution to the Formation of #Archaeology in the #Caucasus

Gobekli Tepe & the Younger Dryas: why did we start farming?

Georgia: The Caucasian pearl that risks to disappear (Documentary)

The Rise & Fall of Europe's First Longhouse Builders - European Prehistory

Interview with Max Adams author of 'The Museum of the Wood Age'

The French Do Not Care About Work

Georgia’s Deadliest Winter Lifeline

Why the North Caucasus is stereotyped by Russians? | Meeting locals in Pyatigorsk

ANDIN. Armenian Journey Chronicles (Հայերը մետաքսի ճանապարհին եւ Հնդկական օվկիանոսում)

Why the war is not over | John Mearsheimer

Armenia is breaking with Russia — Why it matters | DW News

Old Copper Culture: North America's Forgotten Metal Workers

A German village in the middle of Georgia

Tibet, the path to Wisdom | SLICE | Full documentary

The ENTIRE History Of Islam And Muhammad In 68 Minutes

Full Documentary | Georgia & The Great Caucasus

New Light on the Neolithization of the Armenia and beyond - Artur Petrosyan

