22 min

[S1E44] 🦈 Prehistoric Tragedy: The Oldest Shark Attack Victim with J. Alyssa White Beyond Japan with Oliver Moxham

    • Education

Oliver is joined by J. Alyssa White, PhD candidate in Archaeology at the University of Oxford, to discuss the prehistoric tragedy of the world’s oldest shark attack victim. The 3,000-year-old remains of Tsukumo No. 24 were first excavated in Okayama prefecture in the early 20th century covered in hundreds of small cuts to the bone which had baffled archaeologists until now after Alyssa, along with a team of researchers, compared the damage to that of contemporary shark attack victims. Join us as we explore the final moments of Tsukumo No. 24 in amazing detail.

Read Alyssa's article: 3000-year-old shark attack victim from Tsukumo shell-mound, Okayama, Japan

For a comprehensive list of Japanese time periods, please see Japanese History: A Timeline of Periods and Events

Image and audio credits

Intro clip: tiger sharks by dinger154 is licensed under the Creative Commons 0 License

Intro-outro audio: jasonszklarek / MotionElements.com

[L] Excavation photo - Original excavation photograph of Tsukumo No. 24, courtesy of the Laboratory of Physical Anthropology, Kyoto University

[R] "IMG_1794bcra Tiger Shark (Galeocerdo cuvier)" by Kevin Bryant, DMD is licensed under CC BY-NC-SA 2.0



Copyright © 2021 Oliver Moxham, ℗ 2021 Oliver Moxham. May be freely distributed in a classroom setting.


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Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/beyond-japan/message

Oliver is joined by J. Alyssa White, PhD candidate in Archaeology at the University of Oxford, to discuss the prehistoric tragedy of the world’s oldest shark attack victim. The 3,000-year-old remains of Tsukumo No. 24 were first excavated in Okayama prefecture in the early 20th century covered in hundreds of small cuts to the bone which had baffled archaeologists until now after Alyssa, along with a team of researchers, compared the damage to that of contemporary shark attack victims. Join us as we explore the final moments of Tsukumo No. 24 in amazing detail.

Read Alyssa's article: 3000-year-old shark attack victim from Tsukumo shell-mound, Okayama, Japan

For a comprehensive list of Japanese time periods, please see Japanese History: A Timeline of Periods and Events

Image and audio credits

Intro clip: tiger sharks by dinger154 is licensed under the Creative Commons 0 License

Intro-outro audio: jasonszklarek / MotionElements.com

[L] Excavation photo - Original excavation photograph of Tsukumo No. 24, courtesy of the Laboratory of Physical Anthropology, Kyoto University

[R] "IMG_1794bcra Tiger Shark (Galeocerdo cuvier)" by Kevin Bryant, DMD is licensed under CC BY-NC-SA 2.0



Copyright © 2021 Oliver Moxham, ℗ 2021 Oliver Moxham. May be freely distributed in a classroom setting.


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Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/beyond-japan/message

22 min

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