Martin Porr
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martinporr.bsky.social
Martin Porr
@martinporr.bsky.social

Associate Professor of Archaeology
University of Western Australia
Centre for Rock Art Research + Management

Frobenius Institut für kulturanthropologische Forschung (Goethe Universität Frankfurt)

Universität Tübingen

http://uwa.academia.edu/MartinPorr
.. more

History 31%
Geology 15%

www.abc.net.au

I was invited to provide some comments on the fascinating story below, which discusses the earliest known examples of the use of blue pigment during the European Palaeolithic. Interesting results with some intriguing implications.

www.science.org/content/arti...
Paleolithic painters had the blues
Two recent studies shine light on the earliest known artistic usages of blue pigment
www.science.org
"The Netherlands plans to transfer more than 28,000 fossils from the Dubois collection to Indonesia, following a request by Indonesian authorities."

omg

Just want to thank Ben for his great contribution, the first in the special issue, and my-co-editor, Gianpiero Di Maida and the editorial staff at the Ethnographisch-Archäologische Zeitschrift for their hard work and their understanding!

Please have a look at this new open access paper by Benjamin Alberti that was just published in the EAZ. This is part of a special issue on ontological approaches in archaeology with more great papers to follow! #archaeology

www.eaz-journal.org/index.php/ea...

Great to have been able to conduct this survey at the WA Maritime Museum for the Deep Time Images project together with @lauramayer.bsky.social! Lots to analyze and lots of food for thought! #TheGreatKimberleyWilderness
That’s a wrap for visitor interviews at WA Maritime Museum! We had everything from tears to wondering who their favourite Hemsworth brother was after seeing Luke hanging out of a helicopter. Looking forward to analysing the interviews and learning more about the #TheGreatKimberleyWilderness 🎥

Reposted by Martin Porr

That’s a wrap for visitor interviews at WA Maritime Museum! We had everything from tears to wondering who their favourite Hemsworth brother was after seeing Luke hanging out of a helicopter. Looking forward to analysing the interviews and learning more about the #TheGreatKimberleyWilderness 🎥

Yes, the website is in German, but the volume itself is in English

The book includes many fabulous papers and goes back to a conference at the University of Tübingen in 2018. I hope that you will find it useful, and I want to thank my co-editors and all authors for their hard work, battling through the pandemic and other challenges! @deeptimeheritage.bsky.social

Here is the original letter/announcement from the White House, another step in the Trump's attack strategy on the museum, cultural, and research sectors

www.whitehouse.gov/briefings-st...

Come work with us!! Job opportunity!!

We just advertised a 5-year full-time T/R Archaeology Lecturer position at Level B.

This will suit an early career researcher with a teaching and research profile that is relevant to Australia.

Full details below!

external.jobs.uwa.edu.au/cw/en/job/52...

Reposted by Martin Porr

Was all the scapegoating in Australian politics maybe just that??!!

www.abc.net.au/news/2025-07...
International students have not driven rents and inflation higher, RBA says
An RBA paper suggests the rapid growth in foreign students post-pandemic did not play a big role in pushing rents higher.
www.abc.net.au

Reposted by Martin Porr

Populist governments are mobilizing emotions like nostalgia and resentment to justify eroding academic freedom and reshaping higher education. Scholars who study nationalism, emotion and higher education explore this troubling strategy: theconversation.com/leaders-in-i...
Leaders in India, Hungary and the US are using appeals to nostalgia and nationalism to attack higher education
Populist, right-wing governments often target universities as enemies of the state. The Trump administration is watching − and learning.
theconversation.com

Reposted by Martin Porr

Not without controversy, but Western Australia has a new world heritage site!

www.abc.net.au/news/2025-07...
UNESCO approves World Heritage bid for rock art over emissions concerns
The UNESCO has approved World Heritage status for the 40,000-year-old rock art of Murujuga, in Western Australia in Paris.
www.abc.net.au