Sujet : Re: Special Issue: The Taung Child then and now: Commemorating its centenary in a postcolonial age
De : mario.petrinovic1 (at) *nospam* zg.htnet.hr (Mario Petrinovic)
Groupes : sci.anthropology.paleoDate : 10. Feb 2025, 20:15:10
Autres entêtes
Organisation : Iskon Internet d.d.
Message-ID : <vodj7u$aj2$1@sunce.iskon.hr>
References : 1 2 3
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On 10.2.2025. 19:09, Mario Petrinovic wrote:
On 10.2.2025. 17:21, Pandora wrote:
Op 10-02-2025 om 06:31 schreef Primum Sapienti:
>
https://sajs.co.za/issue/view/1257/fullissue12112pdf
>
A note from the Editor-in-Chief
>
At the South African Journal of Science we are
delighted to have been given the opportunity to
host a special issue commemorating the centenary
of the publication of the discovery of the Taung
Child – a major milestone in science history.
>
We are grateful for the collegial and steadfast
work of the Guest Editors, Rebecca Ackermann,
Robyn Pickering, Yonatan Sahle and Lauren
Schroeder. As with other special issues, we have
paid particular attention to the independence of
review processes, with review processes
undertaken by our usual editorial team. We did
ask the Guest Editors for suggestions of
reviewers and expert readers, but we did not
necessarily follow their suggestions – we
considered these as we would consider suggestions
from authors themselves.
>
We are very pleased, therefore, not only to be
publishing a special issue on very important
issues for science in our context, but also that,
with the kind cooperation of the Guest Editors,
we are able confidently to state that all papers
in the special issue (and those that were not
accepted) were subject to the same levels of
rigorous assessment as all other submissions to
our Journal.
>
See also the collection "100 years of Australopithecus" from Nature:
>
https://www.nature.com/collections/bdeahhcgcc
Listen to this:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1962%E2%80%931966
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1967%E2%80%931970
This is the best music that ever existed. It takes you only 3 hours to listen to it all. When I was young I listened to the whole collection three times a day (so, 9 hours a day), for years, every day. While you were sitting by the book, trying to learn about humans, I was being a human.
I am sick of those data collectors. Some people think that paleoanthropology is actually the science of tailoring, so they measure everything, somebody else thinks that it is like numismatics, so they collect everything. Tell me what you learnt from those data, don't tell me that I must obtain all the data. Have you learnt anything?
https://youtu.be/gcYgfbnrV_I?si=yIJyNEcLD75l45uN
Ah, I know why you showed me this list, because in this list it is written: "God works in mysterious ways". Hallelujah, :) .