Follow #FlindersRocks next week to get all the news from ARCH8405 The Archaeology of Australian Stone Artefacts at #Flinders!
— Alice Gorman (@drspacejunk) November 7, 2012
@drspacejunk possibly one of the first in world to give a subject its own hashtag.Follow #FlindersRocks for @flinders stone artefact fun.
— Boring History Girl (@boringhstrygirl) November 7, 2012
MT @boringhstrygirl: @drspacejunk possibly one of the 1st in world to give a subject its own hashtag. Follow #FlindersRocks for @flinders…
— Flinders University (@Flinders) November 7, 2012
@boringhstrygirl @drspacejunk We’ve got our own hashtag?! AWESOME: ##FlindersRocks
— Amanda467 (@Amanda467) November 7, 2012
This adds new meaning to the term “rockjock”! Woppinknocker? Is he serious? Might give this one a miss next week for #FlindersRocks
— Alice Gorman (@drspacejunk) November 7, 2012
Three days to go! The text book: Holdaway and Stern 2004 A record in stone: the study of Australia’s flaked stone artefacts. #FlindersRocks
— Alice Gorman (@drspacejunk) November 8, 2012
I am SOOO excited about the lithics workshop next week. Yes. I AM a nerd. #FlindersRocks — Amanda467 (@Amanda467) November 9, 2012
Three sleeps until the Archaeology of Australian Stone Artefacts intensive starts at Flinders. #FlindersRocks — Alice Gorman (@drspacejunk) November 9, 2012
The rest of today: preparing for ARCH8405 The Archaeology of Australian Stone Artefacts. #FlindersRocks — Alice Gorman (@drspacejunk) November 9, 2012
On my way to the lithics field school. Woo hoo! #FlindersRocks — Amanda467 (@Amanda467) November 10, 2012
@amanda467 see you there! — Jordan Ralph (@JordsRalph) November 10, 2012
@jordsralph sure will! — Amanda467 (@Amanda467) November 10, 2012
Totally looking forward to the department of Rocks at #FlindersRocks this week. Have been studying up … @drspacejunk — traktorland (@traktorland) November 10, 2012
@amanda467 I’m in Radelaide and sooo looking forward the lithics field school #FlindersRocks
— Amanda467 (@Amanda467) November 10, 2012
Tonight …. I’m all about proximal fragments. #FlindersRocks
— Alice Gorman (@drspacejunk) November 10, 2012
Officially only interested in butts 😉 RT@drspacejunk: Tonight …. I’m all about proximal fragments. #FlindersRocks — R M Wragg Sykes (@LeMoustier) November 10, 2012
@lemoustier Truly I love you and your work.#distal #FlindersRocks — Alice Gorman (@drspacejunk) November 10, 2012
@traktorland @amanda467 @jordsralph @rhiannonagutter All #FlinderRocks tweeps! — Alice Gorman (@drspacejunk) November 10, 2012
@drspacejunk @traktorland @amanda467 @rhiannonagutter can’t wait 🙂 #FlindersRocks
— Jordan Ralph (@JordsRalph) November 10, 2012
What’s your favourite flaked stone artefact? #FlindersRocks
— Alice Gorman (@drspacejunk) November 11, 2012
@drspacejunk Only one?! Tula slug or maybe an exhausted multiplatform core both contain so much history in just one object #Flindersrocks — Jacq Matthews (@archaeo_jacq) November 11, 2012
@drspacejunk Mayan eccentrics — Anne Galloway (@annegalloway) November 11, 2012
@drspacejunk Or a Clovis point made from obsidian
— Anne Galloway (@annegalloway) November 11, 2012
@drspacejunk Don’t make me choose!
— Brett Holman (@Airminded) November 11, 2012
.@drspacejunk Late Middle Palaeolithic bifaces where one side is fresh, other patinated from lying on an ancient landsurface for ages. — R M Wragg Sykes (@LeMoustier) November 11, 2012
@drspacejunk The Boxgrove bifaces (of which I had the pleasure to excavate one myself). Some of them are beautiful — Marco Langbroek (@Marco_Langbroek) November 11, 2012
Only one more sleep unitl ARCH8405 The Archaeoololgy of Australian Stone Toolsat @flinders #FlindersRocks
— Alice Gorman (@drspacejunk) November 11, 2012
Hed full of Rocks. Not just any old Rocks but #FlindersRocks. Time to go Fishing … @drspacejunk
— traktorland (@traktorland) November 11, 2012
Guest lecturer @lynleywallis is talking on Wednesday abour her ithic adventures #FlindersRocks
— Alice Gorman (@drspacejunk) November 11, 2012