16/12/2021
Congratulations to Robert Losey for his excellent article exploring the open-endness and unfinished nature of domestication - and for remembering the CAS project and Arctic Domus.
Domestication is not an ancient moment of selection for prosociality: Insights from dogs and modern humans - Robert J. Losey, 2021
Domestication is often portrayed as a long-past event, at times even in archaeological literature. The term domestication is also now applied to other processes...
17/05/2021
One of our Arctic Domus team members wrote a blog for The British Museum's Citi exhibition -Arctic: culture and climate.
Dogs in the Arctic
‘Dogs are man’s best friend’, King Frederick of Prussia allegedly said in the 18th century. In the Arctic however, dogs are much more than that – they can be guardians, means of transport, ceremonial sacrifices, hunting companions and in some places even providers of fur for clothing. Kiliii...
10/10/2019
NEW RESEARCH PAPER
Tamara Ranspot, our Arctic Domus student, has published a paper based on her PhD dissertation and research she conducted while in Aberdeen. The paper was published in a Special Issue of The Journal of Ethnobiology. Congratulations, Tamara! https://ethnobiology.org/publications/journal-of-ethnobiology/current
The Relational Nature of Song in Musical Human-Animal Interactions in Tr'ondëk Hwëch'in Traditional Territory, Yukon
Tamara Ranspot
KEYWORDS: Tr'ondëk Hwëch'in, human-animal interactions, song, relationality, environmental change
Journal of Ethnobiology Volume 39, Number 2 • 2019 | Society of Ethnobiology
02/08/2019
A new long-awaited publication from our Arctic Domus team
Journal of Anthropological Archaeology | Vol 55, In progress (September 2019) | ScienceDirect.com
Read the latest articles of Journal of Anthropological Archaeology at ScienceDirect.com, Elsevier’s leading platform of peer-reviewed scholarly literature
02/08/2019
A new long-awaited publication from our Arctic Domus team
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jaa.2019.101079