Yesterday, the 30th Annual Congress of the European Association of Archaeologists started in Rome.
I will present my work on the European Acheulean tomorrow at 8:30 in room CU013-FL2-Rasetti, within session 364: “Modeling Pleistocene Survival Dynamics: Ecology, Energetics and Evolution.”
I also have a poster about pastclim and tidysdm (our R packages to easily use palaeoclimatic reconstructions and perform palaeoecological modelling). You can read it here on ResearchGate.
I am delighted to share an amazing news! Today I started a new position at the Natural History Museum in London.
I will work in the Plants under Pressuregroup, led by Dr. Neil Brummitt. I will study the biodiversity of plants in Tropical Africa, and the results of my research will be used by the local communities to restore forests in former mining areas.
I am particularly excited about this aspect. It is the first time that my work will directly inform conservation efforts, and it is a wonderful opportunity to make a difference (little steps can go a long way). I am equally excited to join the Museum: it is an amazing institution that has the power to inspire such a large community.
The project is funded by a Knowledge Assets Grant Fund, i.e. funding given by the UK government to develop early-stage intellectual resources towards a wider adoption or commercialisation.
Monday, 9 October, 2023 – 16:00 to 17:00 (UK time)
I will be talking about palaeoecology, #paleoclimate, and big data in archaeology. I will also present two new tools that I co-developed to make palaeoecological analyses easier: pastclim and tidysdm.
Abstract: In recent years, we witnessed the publication of both large datasets of archaeological occurrences and palaeoclimatic data series covering hundreds of thousands of years. This opened the door to new, exciting possibilities in the field of palaeoecology.
To make the best use of such data, I co-developed two new R packages that facilitate their use and allow simpler pipelines for their analyses.
The first package is pastclim. It is designed to easily access and manipulate climatic data and palaeoclimatic/future climate reconstructions. It contains a set of functions to recover the climate for time periods of interest, crop to specific areas, extract data from locations scattered in space and/or time, retrieve time series from individual sites, and manage the ice or land coverage.
The second package is tidysdm. The rationale behind it is to take advantage of the tidymodels framework in R to perform species distribution modelling (also known as habitat suitability/ecological niche modelling). This is the first software specifically designed to work with occurrences scattered in time, a task that with other tools, is either impossible or requires extensive tweaking. The integration with pastclim allows hassle-free access and handling of climatic data from the past, the present, and the future.
I will also present some applications of such tools, as an example of the new opportunities they could offer to scholars studying the past (e.g. archaeologists, archaeozoologists, palaeoecologists, palaeoanthropologists).
Yesterday I had a poster about pastclim (our R package to easily access and use palaeoclimatic reconstructions) at the Congress of the International Union for Quaternary Research (INQUA 2023) in Rome. It was during session Session 82: “Data science and paleoecology: current intersections and advances”.
At this link, you can find the abstract and more information about the session. And if you are interested in reading the poster, you can find it here on ResearchGate.