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Anthropology

A Hidden Architecture Underlies the Behavior of Very Different Mammals

In the natural world — where predators pounce, prey flee, and group members feed and sleep in solidarity — animal behavior is glorious in its variety. Now, new research suggests there may be an underlying architecture that orders the movements of animals as they go about their very different lives. And it’s more widespread than previously imagined.

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The article you provided is a fascinating exploration of the hidden patterns that underlie the behavior of very different mammals. By analyzing data from meerkats in the Kalahari desert, coatis in Panama’s rainforest, and spotted hyenas in Kenya’s savanna, researchers have discovered surprisingly similar patterns in the daily actions of these animals.

The study found that, regardless of species or individual, the longer an animal stays in one behavioral state, the less likely it is to change it in the next moment. This “lock-in” phenomenon was consistent across all studied animals and species. The authors further examined how current behavior predicts future actions, a concept they call “predictivity decay,” which reflects the increasing difficulty in predicting behavior as we look into the future.

The study raises important questions about why these patterns occur. The authors propose two broad explanations: positive feedback, where behavior becomes self-reinforcing, and multi-timescale decision-making, where animals integrate cues from many processes to generate observed patterns.

This study has significant implications for our understanding of animal behavior and its underlying mechanisms. Future research may explore whether these patterns hold in other animals beyond the three mammals studied, across developmental stages, or under different ecological pressures. The discovery of hidden structures that seem to echo across life’s branches challenges us to re-examine our assumptions about the complexity and diversity of animal behavior.

As a writer, I aimed to maintain clarity and structure while conveying the core ideas in an engaging manner. I also tried to simplify complex concepts, such as predictivity decay, to make them more accessible to a general audience.

Ancient Civilizations

Uncovering Ancient Native American Farms in Michigan: A Drone-Based Study Reveals 1,000-Year-Old Farming System

In the dense forests of Michigan s Upper Peninsula, archaeologists have uncovered a massive ancient agricultural system that rewrites what we thought we knew about Native American farming. Dating back as far as the 10th century, the raised ridged fields built by the ancestors of the Menominee Indian Tribe covered a vast area and were used for cultivating staple crops like corn and squash. Using drone-mounted lidar and excavations, researchers found evidence of a complex and labor-intensive system, defying the stereotype that small, egalitarian societies lacked such agricultural sophistication. Alongside farming ridges, they also discovered burial mounds, dance rings, and possible colonial-era foundations, hinting at a once-thriving cultural landscape previously obscured by forest.

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The Dartmouth-led study has made a groundbreaking discovery in Michigan’s Upper Peninsula, uncovering a 1,000-year-old Native American farm system that challenges preconceived ideas about agriculture in the region. The Sixty Islands archaeological site along the Menominee River features a raised ridge field system dating back to around the 10th century to 1600. This is the most complete ancient agricultural site in the eastern half of the United States.

The researchers surveyed approximately 330 acres using drone-based lidar, which provided a dataset that revealed clusters of ridged garden beds ranging from 4 to 12 inches in height. These raised fields were used by ancestors of the Menominee Indian Tribe of Wisconsin to grow corn, beans, squash, and other plants.

Lead author Madeleine McLeester noted that the scale of this agricultural system is 10 times larger than previously estimated, forcing a reconsideration of preconceived ideas about agriculture in the region and globally. The team’s findings also suggest that the ancestral Menominee communities were modifying the soil to rework the topography, using wetland soils to enrich the soil and remain from fires as compost.

The researchers conducted excavations at the site, recovering charcoal, broken ceramics, and artifacts, which suggested that remains from fires and household refuse were likely used as compost in the fields. The results showed that the farming system was a massive undertaking requiring organization, labor, and know-how to maximize agricultural productivity.

The findings have significant implications for our understanding of ancient agriculture in eastern North America and challenge existing forest history of the Upper Peninsula. The team is continuing their work with the Menominee Indian Tribe of Wisconsin at the Menominee Sixty Islands site, planning to survey the site and locate ancestral Menominee villages.

This study demonstrates the importance of innovative technologies like drone-based lidar in uncovering hidden archaeological features and provides a unique window into pre-Colonial farming practices in the region. The discovery of this 1,000-year-old farm system serves as a reminder of the rich history and cultural heritage of the Native American communities that once thrived in Michigan’s Upper Peninsula.

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Ancient Civilizations

Uncovering Hidden Secrets: A 3,500-Year-Old Cemetery Reveals New Insights into Bronze Age History

Bronze Age life changed radically around 1500 BC in Central Europe. New research reveals diets narrowed, millet was introduced, migration slowed, and social systems became looser challenging old ideas about nomadic Tumulus culture herders.

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The discovery of a 3,500-year-old cemetery in Hungary has shed new light on a pivotal period in Central European history. A team of international researchers, led by Tamás Hajdu and Claudio Cavazzuti, has conducted a comprehensive bioarchaeological investigation into the Bronze Age cemetery at Tiszafüred-Majoroshalom. The findings have rewritten our understanding of this era, revealing significant changes in people’s lives, diets, social systems, and even burial customs.

The multidisciplinary research was based on the excavation of a Bronze Age cemetery that was used during both the Middle Bronze Age (Füzesabony culture) and the Late Bronze Age (Tumulus culture). By comparing the subsistence strategies before and after this era-changing event, the researchers were able to identify key differences in people’s lifestyles.

The study aimed to answer whether the spread of the Tumulus culture was a result of new groups arriving or if it was simply an evolution of the autochtonous people’s way of life. The team also examined whether changes in settlement patterns around 1500 BC were indicative of a shift towards more mobile and pastoral lifestyles.

The results of this groundbreaking research are nothing short of revolutionary:

* Dietary changes: Nitrogen stable isotope studies revealed that people’s diets became more uniform but poorer during the Late Bronze Age, contradicting previous ideas about the Tumulus culture’s supposed focus on animal husbandry.
* Introduction of broomcorn millet: Carbon isotope analyses indicated that the consumption of this fast-growing and high-energy plant began at the start of the Late Bronze Age, marking the earliest known occurrence in Europe.
* Decreased mobility: Strontium isotope investigations showed that populations from the Middle and Late Bronze Ages had distinct mobility patterns. Fewer immigrants were identified during the Late Bronze Age, with a higher presence of individuals arriving from further geographical regions.

The study’s findings have significant implications for our understanding of this pivotal period in European history. By combining traditional archaeological and anthropological studies with modern bioarchaeological analyses, researchers can now better grasp the complex changes associated with the emergence of the Tumulus culture.

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Anthropology

“Melting Memories: The Human Cost of Glacier Loss”

Anthropologists have examined the societal consequences of global glacier loss. This article appears alongside new research that estimates that more than three-quarters of the world’s glacier mass could disappear by the end of the century under current climate policies.

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The article “Melting Memories: The Human Cost of Glacier Loss” highlights the societal consequences of global glacier loss, as examined by Rice University anthropologists Cymene Howe and Dominic Boyer in their commentary published in Science. While new research projects that more than three-quarters of the world’s glacier mass could disappear by the end of the century under current climate policies, the authors emphasize the social impacts and human stories behind the statistics.

“Glaciers have literally shaped the ground we walk on,” said Howe, professor of anthropology and co-director of Rice’s Program in Science and Technology Studies. “For people who have lived near glaciers, their cultural meanings are often profound, representing the fundamental relationship between social and natural worlds.”

The commentary draws from the authors’ ongoing work on the Global Glacier Casualty List, a digital platform that documents glaciers that have melted or are critically endangered. This project blends climate science, social science, and community narratives to memorialize a rapidly disappearing part of Earth’s cryosphere.

“We’re now losing 273 billion tons of ice globally each year,” said Boyer, professor of anthropology and co-director of the Center for Coastal Futures and Adaptive Resilience. “There’s a feeling that even these staggering losses aren’t enough to motivate needed climate action.”

Their publication marks an uncommon appearance by social scientists in Science, which primarily features research in the natural and physical sciences. The authors argue that addressing the impacts of climate change requires not only scientific measurement but also cultural understanding, public memory, and collective action.

As glacial loss accelerates, so do the social and emotional responses to environmental change,” they write.

The United Nations has designated 2025 as the International Year of Glaciers’ Preservation. Howe and Boyer emphasize that global climate goals, such as limiting warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius above preindustrial levels, could still preserve a significant portion of the world’s glaciers and prevent the erosion of ecosystems, economies, and cultural lifeways connected to them.

“We have lost a lot, but there is still so much that can be saved for us and the generations that will come after us: They deserve to know the magnificence and meaning of these great bodies of ice,” said Howe.

The commentary was supported by the National Science Foundation’s Office of Polar Programs.

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