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      <title>Koyal Info Group Mag by Alfred Schachter</title>
      <link>https://padlet.com/alfredschachter/h2w6pc2902</link>
      <description></description>
      <language>en-us</language>
      <pubDate>2014-01-30 07:22:09 UTC</pubDate>
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         <title>Koyal Info Group Mag: History-Making Expedition Recruits New
Scientists</title>
         <author>alfredschachter</author>
         <link>https://padlet.com/alfredschachter/h2w6pc2902/wish/20166316</link>
         <description><![CDATA[<p>

<p>The "Rising Star
Expedition", known for its recent recovery of one of the largest troves of
hominin (early human) fossils ever discovered in one place, is now ambitiously
seeking <b><a href="http://koyalgroupinfomag.com/blog/">new early-career scientists to study</a>
</b>the more than 1,200 fossil elements retrieved from the site and now housed
at the University of the Witwatersrand (Wits University) in Johannesburg, South
Africa. </p>

<p>"The fossil material is an
exceptional sample representing most of the parts of the skeleton, and our
first task is to describe the material and place it into the context of hominin
evolution," says John Hawks, a paleoanthropologist with the University of
Wisconsin-Madison and a key member of the team that recovered the fossils
during the Fall of 2013.</p>

<p>To that end, Professor Lee Berger
of Wits University initiated an effort to recruit the best young minds he can
find to help examine the finds and publish some of the first scientific
observations, analyses and conclusions about the morphology, among other
aspects, of the fragments, and what they might mean in terms of their place in
the broad scope of human evolution. Berger has been at the forefront of major hominin
fossil discoveries in South Africa, such as the recent Australopithecus sediba
finds at the Malapa cave site.</p>

<p>"We are seeking early-career
scientists with data and skill sets applicable to the study of any part of the
anatomy of early hominins," say Berger and colleagues in the recently
released announcement. "Participants must be willing to share these data
and skills in a collaborative workshop designed to study, describe and publish
these important hominin fossils."</p>

<p>While the workshop participants
will receive mentoring from established senior scientists, their publications
will be under their authorship and will be considered to be "high
impact" publications.</p>

<p>The project is at least in part
representative of Berger's philosophy of "open science", where
scholars and scientists from all over the world are invited to play an active
role in the process of research and discovery, expanding the perspectives,
skills and knowledge sets brought to bear on finding the answers to important
research questions. Traditionally, research on new finds in the field of
paleoanthropology has often been conducted by a relatively closed set of
scholars or scientists over a long period of time, resulting in new hypotheses
or theories and conclusions that might have been different if 'more eyes' were
brought to bear on the subjects of study. </p>

<p>The workshops are also intended
to help build a bigger, <b><a href="https://foursquare.com/p/the-koyal-group-info-mag/62282215">brighter
future for the science</a></b>.</p>

<p>"We are recruiting an
international team, and we are especially interested in building a group that
will continue to produce great science in the future," says Hawks.</p>

<p>The trove of bones was first
discovered in a south African cave system in October, 2013 by a pair of skilled
cavers, who then alerted Berger. To investigate the cave and its contents,
Berger spearheaded the assembly of an expeditionary group (called the
"Rising Star Expedition") of scientists. Along with chief scientists,
the group included six researchers (who Berger dubbed "underground
astronauts") who were hand-picked to actually enter the cave system to
excavate and remove the fossil bones. To qualify for this job, these team
members had to have a master's degree or Ph.D. in paleontology, archaeology or
a related field; they had to be experienced spelunkers, or cavers; and they had
to be small enough to successfully and safely negotiate an 18-centimeter-wide
opening leading to the targeted cave chamber. The effort has proven to be a
great success, producing more than 1,200 fossil specimens representing a number
of individuals initially identified as early hominins. The type of hominin is
still unknown. It is one of the questions that the workshop project team hopes
to answer.</p>

<p>There is more ahead. While
excavating, the Rising Star team found evidence of articulated skeletons just
below the levels where they were digging. These have yet to be recovered.</p>

<p>"Thousands of elements are
left there", said Berger on a recent National Geographic weekend radio
show. "We have excavated an area of only half the size of a normal
breakfast table, and two or three inches deep, to recover more than a thousand
elements of more than a dozen individuals.....and just underneath [that]
surface, we find articulated remains -- their bodies are there, and that's what
I had to close up."</p>

<p>Berger plans to return to the
site for further excavation.</p>

<p>More information about the Rising
Star Expedition can be acquired at the National Geographic website dedicated to
covering the project. For scientists interested in applying for the Workshop, <b><a href="http://koyalgroupinfomag.com/research.html">see this website for additional
information</a></b>.</p>

<p><b><i><a href="http://popular-archaeology.com/issue/june-2013/article/history-making-expedition-recruits-new-scientists">Read
this post here…</a></i></b></p>

</p>]]></description>
         <enclosure url="" />
         <pubDate>2014-01-30 07:23:16 UTC</pubDate>
         <guid>https://padlet.com/alfredschachter/h2w6pc2902/wish/20166316</guid>
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