Spring International Conferences: the latest results of the Lendület Mobility Research Group were presented in Kiel and Albuquerque

This spring, we were able to present our research team not only in Europe, but also in the United States of America in New Mexico.

The international conference titled “Socio-Environmental Dynamics over the Last 15,000 Years: The Creation of Landscapes” was held for the sixth time at the University of Kiel, between 11-16 March 2019. In the 19 sessions, researchers from Eurasia to America presented their latest results on extensive research on prehistoric and pre-modern communities, landscapes, environment, lifestyle, diseases, burials, demographics and further exciting topics.

Our research team was represented by Gabriella Kulcsár in the session “From Tells to Settlement Systems: Landscape and Networks of the Danube and the Tisza from the Neolithic to the Bronze Age” (organizers: M. Savu, R. Staniuk, R. Hofmann, J. Müller). In her presentation titled “Bronze Age Settlement and Society along the Danube in Central Hungary”, she summarized the latest research results on tell and multilayered settlements along the right and left bank of the Danube in Hungary, inhabited in the second half of the early Bronze Age and in the Middle Bronze Age (between 2300/2200-1500/1450 BC) by the Nagyrév and Vatya cultures. In addition, we presented the environmental, geo-archaeological and archaeological results of our research within the Kakucs region, carried out in cooperation with colleagues from the University of Poznań and Kiel in several presentations.

Research from the Momentum Mobility Research group was recently presented at the Society for American Archaeology (SAA) Conference organized in Albuquerque, New Mexico between April 11-14, 2019.

The poster “Bronze Age Burials from the Carpathian Basin: New Isotope Results,” was presented by Dr. Julia Giblin in the session “Learning about the Past with Fragments from the Fire: New Research on an NSF-REU Fieldschool.”

Close to 5,000 archaeologists and students from across the world were in attendance in 421 sessions.



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