3/27/2023 0 Comments Jayne mastodonte![]() ![]() Today, I braved the backyard again so that I could go pull up more English ivy along the row of black inkberries. This is going to be a long slow project that will never really end. I want to do some studying on habitat-friendly creek maintenance, so if you have recommendations for resources, let me know in the comments. (It is submerged in the photos.) Removing a sapling growing in the middle of it is another. Replacing the footbridge with one that arches higher above the creek is one plan. Just like the rest of the backyard, I have plans for that little creek. Always be careful.) I kept an eye on it the rest of the day. (Additional note: flood waters always flow fast. That’s how fast a creek or a river can jump its banks. Out of curiosity, after about half an hour, I opened a second-floor window to see how the creek was doing (there is a privacy covering on that window). Then, I went inside to do some work for awhile just as the skies opened back up. So, when the rain paused for a moment, I went out and took some pictures and video of it running high and quick, just for fun. The little creek behind my house usually runs a little trickle or less, fills quickly with any rain, and recedes again quickly. Just after Thanksgiving, we had a massive downpour. Author Jayne Posted on JanuJanuCategories Current Events, Social Issues Tags grief, Tyre Nichols, violence Leave a comment on Tyre Nichols Weekend Daylight I had planed to continue on and tell you about my mundane little life, my normal yard projects, my little joys, my little concerns. ![]() He was literally screaming for his mother to hear him and come to his aid. until I later read in an article that he was only a few houses away from his mother’s house, where he was staying. When he called out for his mother, it wasn’t what I imagined of a man dying at the hands of brutality–remembering and wishing for a love that overpowers all. I made the decision to watch two body cam and the “skyview” recordings. I read a few of the news stories, and they mention that he called out for his mother three times. For others, it just feels like we are becoming numb, even when this was so egregiously horrendous. I know that for some, it is self-protection and mental health self-care. Right now, on social media, life seems to be going blithely on, for so many. When I have gone through minor life crises and loss, it has been so odd to see the world just go on. Grave Injustice: The American Indian Repatriation Movement and NAGPRA by Kathleen S.First, I want to acknowledge the sick beating death, as a violation of public trust, of Tyre Nichols.Indiana University Intensive NAGPRA Summer Training and Education Program. ![]() Return of the Sacred Pole by Nebraska Public Media (YouTube Video).Transcriptsįor rough transcripts of this episode go to Links So please, subscribe to the A Life in Ruins Podcast, hosted by the Archaeology Podcast Network, on whichever platform you use to listen to us on the "All Shows Feed." Please support our show by following our channel. Listening to and downloading our episodes on the A Life in Ruins channel helps our podcast grow. ![]() If you are listening to this episode on the "Archaeology Podcast Network All Shows Feed," please consider subscribing to the "A Life in Ruins Podcast" channel to support our show. If you have left a podcast review on iTunes or Spotify, please email us at so we can get shipping information to send you a sticker. We close out the interview with a critical discussion regarding the upcoming NAGPRA revisions and their potential impact on Indigenous Communities and Tribal NAGPRA officers. For the remainder of the episode, we delve into the mechanics of the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act (NAGPRA), why it's still essential in the field three decades after being passed, and how the law has created more meaningful, inclusive and collaborative research in archaeology and museology. We start with a conversation about their education and background in Anthropology and how they ended up with a Ph.D. Jayne-Leigh Thomas, the Director of the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act at Indiana University. ![]()
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