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Geraldine Finlayson

Geraldine Finlayson (born 31 October 1960) is a Gibraltarian scientist and CEO of the Gibraltar National Museum. She was Director of the John Mackintosh Hall until October 2011. She has played a major role in developing the "Gibraltar method" of archaeological research, especially that carried out underwater, and is one of a team of scientists who have made major discoveries about the nature of Neanderthal culture.


Geraldine Finlayson

Geraldine Finlayson at John Mackintosh Square during the tercentenary commemoration of the Treaty of Utrecht, 13 July 2013
Born (1960-10-31) 31 October 1960 (age 63)
NationalityBritish
CitizenshipGibraltarian
Alma mater
Known for
  • Chief Laboratory Scientist of the Gibraltar Museum
  • Director of the Institute for Gibraltarian Studies
SpouseProfessor Clive Finlayson
Scientific career
InstitutionsGibraltar Museum
Thesis Climate, vegetation and biodiversity: a multiscale study of the south of the Iberian Peninsula  (2006)

Early life and education edit

Finlayson was born in Gibraltar and attended Gilbraltar Girls Comprehensive School.[1]

Finlayson earned her PhD in 2006 by the Anglia Ruskin University, Cambridge, UK, where she presented the thesis "Climate, vegetation and biodiversity: a multiscale study of the south of the Iberian Peninsula."[2]

Career edit

She worked in the civil service of the Government of Gibraltar from 1981 to 1993.[1] For many years, Finlayson has studied the presence of Neanderthals in Gibraltar, having performed several excavations in the region, including underwater.[2]

Finlayson was Director of the John Mackintosh Hall from 1993 to 2011. During that time she oversaw a great many public functions, including conferences, exhibitions, and concerts.

She is currently the CEO of the Gibraltar National Museum.[2]

She is also Co-Director of the Underwater Research Unit (URU), the activities of which include surveying the seabed and caves for the Gibraltar Caves Project, conducting a comprehensive survey of Gibraltar's Submerged Heritage for the Heritage Database, and carrying out wreck surveys and pre-disturbance surveys on archaeological sites.

Furthermore, she is an Advanced Diver and Open Water Instructor with BS-AC, a Tutor with the Nautical Archaeology Society, and a Senior Tutor at the Gibraltar Museum.

Research Interests edit

Finlayson's research interests include the relationship among climate, vegetation, landscape features and biodiversity; the spatio-temporal distribution patterns of vegetation and animals, focusing mainly on the Southern Iberian Peninsula and the Quaternary; the cultural influences on the development of "Gibraltarian cuisine"; and the study of Gilbraltar's "underwater cultural heritage."[2]

Other professional activities edit

Finlayson gave a talk entitled "The John Mackintosh Hall – 40 years on" on 13 April 2004, about the cultural and sports venue in Gibraltar.[3]

At the sixth Iberian Quaternary Congress in 2006, Finlayson "presented an innovative method in which she reconstructed in fine detail the habitat of the Neanderthals outside Gorham’s Cave".[4]

In 2008, Finlayson, along with Prof. Clive Finlayson and Dr Darren Fa, visited Malta at the invitation of that nation's Superintendence of Cultural Heritage. The team examined an archaeological dig and provided advice on the work underway. They also discussed a possible long-term collaborative project applying the Gibraltar model to the Maltese islands.[5]

Geraldine and Clive Finlayson gave a lecture on human evolution at the University of Granada in 2009. The lecture, entitled "The Luck of Man: the role of historical contingency in human evolution", traced the history of the evolution of Homo sapiens.[6]

In November 2010, Finlayson gave a lecture at the Annual Conference of the Nautical Archaeological Society (NAS) held at Portsmouth University in the UK. Her presentation concerned "the Gibraltar Method", which had been developed by her and teammates in Gibraltar and which was now central to "the study and protection of submerged heritage".[7]

Finlayson made a guest appearance as herself, in the episode 48 ("Das dunkle Geheimnis der Neandertaler", 2012) of the first season of the Austrian TV series Terra Mater.[8]

Finlayson gave a lecture in 2012 in Gibraltar as part of the series "Hidden Worlds and Our Intangible Heritage."[9]

Finlayson gave representatives of the media a tour of Gorham's Cave during the annual expert exploration thereof in 2012.[10]

"Lost world in Gibraltar" edit

Finlayson was one of the authors of a paper by "Key to a lost world in Gibraltar", that was published in 2013 in Geomorphology, She explained to journalists that Gibraltar was once "a Mediterranean Serengeti" where "deer, wild horse and cattle grazed on the savannahs and were stalked by a strange mix of predators that included Spotted Hyaenas, Leopards, Brown Bears, Wolves and Lynxes. This was truly a bit of Africa in Europe". Along with two earlier 2013 papers, this was described by Finlayson as ”a remarkable output of scientific literature for such a small institution as the Gibraltar Museum, comparable to the best research centres in European and North American universities....We have been working very hard to make Gibraltar a Centre of Excellence and we are getting there. We are grateful to the support that HM Government of Gibraltar has given us and we are optimistic that, with this backing, we can take Gibraltar to yet another level".[11]

Neanderthals' cognitive capacity edit

In September 2012, the Gibraltar Museum team, led by Clive Finlayson and including Geraldine Finlayson, published a paper in the journal PLOS One, "Birds of a feather", which argued that “Neanderthals had cognitive capacity which permitted them to think symbolically possibly by the use of ornamentation." This was described by Clive Finlayson as "a huge step forward" in the understanding of Neanderthals. In short, the message was "that the Neanderthals were 'thinking people' and that they were able to extract from the environment," for example "by cutting the feathers and inner bones from the birds of prey they captured, leaving them with the outer shell, and using them as ornaments as has been the case in other cultures across the world."[12]

Books edit

  • The Coastal Shelf of the Mediterranean and Beyond: Corridor and Refugium for Human Populations in the Pleistocene (edited with Geoffrey Bailey, José S. Carrión, Darren A. Fa, Clive Finlayson, and Joaquín Rodríguez-Vidal)[13]
  • Biogeography of human colonisations and extinctions in the Pleistocene (with Clive Finlayson and Darren Fa)
  • The Homo habitat niche: Using the avian fossil record to depict ecological characteristics of Palaeolithic Eurasian hominins (with Clive Finlayson et al.)
  • Gibraltar at the end of the millennium: a portrait of a changing land (with Clive Finlayson), 1999[14]

Selected academic articles edit

  • "The Homo habitat niche: using the avian fossil record to depict ecological characteristics of Palaeolithic Eurasian hominins" (with Clive Finlayson, José Carrión, Kimberly Brown, Antonio Sánchez-Marco, Darren Fa, Joaquín Rodríguez-Vidal, Santiago Fernández, Elena Fierro, Marco Bernal-Gómez, Francisco Giles-Pacheco), Quaternary Science Reviews, vol. 30, no. 11, pp. 1525–1532, 2011.
  • "Earliest Known Use of Marine Resources by Neanderthals" (with Miguel Cortés-Sánchez, Arturo Morales-Muñiz, María D. Simón-Vallejo, María C. Lozano-Francisco, José L. Vera-Peláez, Clive Finlayson, Joaquín Rodríguez-Vidal, Antonio Delgado-Huertas, Francisco J. Jiménez-Espejo, Francisca Martínez-Ruiz, M. Aranzazu Martínez-Aguirre, Arturo J. Pascual-Granged), PLOS One, vol. 6, no. 9, 2011.
  • "A coastal reservoir of biodiversity for Upper Pleistocene human populations: palaeoecological investigations in Gorham's Cave (Gibraltar) in the context of the Iberian Peninsula" (with J. S. Carrión, C. Finlayson, S. Fernández, E. Allué, J. A. López-Sáez, P. López-García, G. Gil-Romera, G. Bailey, P. González-Sampériz). Quaternary Science Reviews, vol. 27, no. 23, pp. 2118–2135, 2008.
  • "Caves as archives of ecological and climatic changes in the Pleistocene—The case of Gorham's cave, Gibraltar" (with C. Finlayson, F. Giles Pacheco, J. Rodriguez Vidal, J. S. Carrión, J. M. Recio Espejo). Quaternary International, vol. 181, no. 1, pp. 55–63, 2008.
  • ”Gorham's Cave, Gibraltar—The persistence of a Neanderthal population" (with Clive Finlayson, Darren A. Fa, Francisco Jiménez Espejo, Jóse S. Carrión, Francisco Giles Pacheco, Joaquín Rodríguez Vidal, Chris Stringer, Francisca Martínez Ruiz). Quaternary International – QUATERN INT, vol. 181, no. 1, pp. 64–71, 2008.
  • ”The coastal shelf of the Mediterranean and beyond: Corridor and refugium for human populations in the Pleistocene" (with Geoff Bailey, José S. Carrión, Darren A. Fa, Clive Finlayson, Joaquín Rodríguez-Vidal). Quaternary Science Reviews, vol. 27, no. 23, pp. 2095–2099, 2008.
  • ”Dynamics of a thermo-Mediterranean coastal environment – the Coto Doñana National Park" (with Clive Finlayson, J. M. Recio Espejo). Quaternary Science Reviews, vol. 27, no. 23, pp. 2145–2152, 2008.
  • ”Climate forcing and Neanderthal extinction in Southern Iberia: insights from a multiproxy marine record" (with Francisco J. Jiménez-Espejo, Francisca Martínez-Ruiz, Clive Finlayson, Adina Paytan, Tatsuhiko Sakamoto, Miguel Ortega-Huertas, Koichi Iijima, David Gallego-Torres, Darren Fa). Quaternary Science Reviews, vol. 26, no. 7, pp. 836–852, 2007.
  • ”Did the moderns kill off the Neanderthals? A reply to F. d’Errico and Sánchez Goñi" (with Clive Finlayson, Darren A. Fa, Francisco Giles Pacheco, Joaquin Rodrı́guez Vidal). Quaternary Science Reviews, vol. 23, no. 9, pp. 1205–1209, 2004.
  • ”Did the moderns kill off the Neanderthals? A reply to F. d'Errico and Sanchez Goni" (with C. Finlayson, D. A. Fa, F. G. Pacheco, J. R. Vidal). Quaternary Science Reviews, vol. 23, pp. 1205–1209, 2004.
  • ”Ecological transitions – But for whom? A perspective from the Pleistocene" (with Clive Finlayson, Antonio Monclova, José S. Carrión, Darren A. Fa, Joaquín Rodríguez-Vidal, Elena Fierro, Santiago Fernández, Marco Bernal-Gómez, Francisco Giles-Pacheco). Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology.
  • ”The tools of the last Neanderthals: Morphotechnical characterisation of the lithic industry at level IV of Gorham’s Cave, Gibraltar" (with Francisco Giles Pacheco, Francisco J. Giles Guzmán, José María Gutiérrez López, Antonio Santiago Pérez, Clive Finlayson, Joaquín Rodríguez Vidal, Darren A. Fa). Quaternary International.
  • ”El registro altitudinal de cambio climático en series kársticas pleistocenas de las Béticas occidentales Evidence of climate change at different altitudes within the karstic regions of the western Betic Range during the Late Pleistocene" (with J. Rodríguez-Vidal, L. M. Cáceres, A. Martínez-Aguirre, J. M. Alcaraz, C. Finlayson).

Honors and awards edit

In 2003 Finlayson and the rest of the Gibraltar Museum team were awarded first prize in the National Archeological Society's "Adopt-a-Wreck" programme for their work on the armed trawler HMS Erin, and in 2006 Geraldine was granted the Gibraltar Award in the Queen's Birthday Honours List[15]

In 2018, Finlayson was appointed Adjunct Professor at Liverpool John Moores University's Faculty of Science.[16]

In 2019, Finlayson was bestowed the Gibraltar Medallion of Distinction, together with her husband Clive, for their work on Gorham's Cave.[17]

Personal life edit

Finlayson's husband, Clive Finlayson, is an evolutionary ecologist who is Curator at the Gibraltar National Museum and who, along with his wife, participates in digs in the Neanderthal caves in Gibraltar and elsewhere. He keeps a blog about these activities at clivehumanevo.blogspot.com,[18] and they have collaborated on many papers and other writings. He is the author of the book Neanderthals and Modern Humans. They have a son together.[19]

References edit

  1. ^ a b "Geraldine Finlayson". LinkedIn.
  2. ^ a b c d "Geraldine Finlayson". Gibraltar National Museum. Retrieved 9 July 2017.
  3. ^ "The John Mackintosh Hall – Forty Years On". Gibraltar.gov.
  4. ^ "The Iberian Peninsula and its peopling by Hominids". The Gibraltar Chronicle.
  5. ^ "Gibraltar archaeologists to visit". Times of Malta.
  6. ^ "Gibraltar Museum in Granada University". SUR in English.
  7. ^ "Dr Gerladine Finlayson". Ocean Treasures.
  8. ^ Internet Movie Database (ed.). "Geraldine Finlayson". Retrieved 25 September 2012.
  9. ^ "388/2012 – Museum Spring 2012 Lecture Series: "Hidden Worlds and Our Intangible Heritage" – a talk by Dr Geraldine Finlayson". noodles.
  10. ^ "Going Paperless". Archaeology in Europe.
  11. ^ "Articles". Gibraltar News.
  12. ^ "Gorham's Cave reveals a brainier Neanderthal walked our shores". Gibraltar Chronicle.
  13. ^ "Re: "The continental shelf hypothesis" (M Verhaegen & S Munro 2002 Nutrition and Health 16: 25–27)". Science Tech Archive.
  14. ^ "Gibraltar at the end of the millennium: a portrait of a changing land". ISBNS.
  15. ^ "Recounting our Underwater Heritage". Ocean Treasures.
  16. ^ "Clive and Geraldine Finlayson given professional appointments at Liverpool John Moores University". Gibraltar Chronicle. Gibraltar Chronicle. Retrieved 14 October 2023.
  17. ^ "2019 recipients of Gibraltar Medallions of Honour and Distinction announced". Gibraltar National Museum. Gibraltar National Museum. Retrieved 14 October 2023.
  18. ^ "Getting the job done". Clive Finlayson's Human Evolution Blog.
  19. ^ Gibraltar Chronicle, ed. (5 July 2012). . Archived from the original on 2 December 2013. Retrieved 25 September 2012.

External links edit

  • Geraldine Finlayson on Twitter  
  • Gibraltar Museum in Granada University
  • "Preparations underway for a major excavation at Gorham's and Vanguard Caves" (PDF).

geraldine, finlayson, born, october, 1960, gibraltarian, scientist, gibraltar, national, museum, director, john, mackintosh, hall, until, october, 2011, played, major, role, developing, gibraltar, method, archaeological, research, especially, that, carried, un. Geraldine Finlayson born 31 October 1960 is a Gibraltarian scientist and CEO of the Gibraltar National Museum She was Director of the John Mackintosh Hall until October 2011 She has played a major role in developing the Gibraltar method of archaeological research especially that carried out underwater and is one of a team of scientists who have made major discoveries about the nature of Neanderthal culture Prof Geraldine FinlaysonGMDGeraldine Finlayson at John Mackintosh Square during the tercentenary commemoration of the Treaty of Utrecht 13 July 2013Born 1960 10 31 31 October 1960 age 63 GibraltarNationalityBritishCitizenshipGibraltarianAlma materAnglia Ruskin UniversityKnown forChief Laboratory Scientist of the Gibraltar Museum Director of the Institute for Gibraltarian StudiesSpouseProfessor Clive FinlaysonScientific careerInstitutionsGibraltar MuseumThesisClimate vegetation and biodiversity a multiscale study of the south of the Iberian Peninsula 2006 Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Career 2 1 Research Interests 3 Other professional activities 3 1 Lost world in Gibraltar 3 2 Neanderthals cognitive capacity 4 Books 5 Selected academic articles 6 Honors and awards 7 Personal life 8 References 9 External linksEarly life and education editFinlayson was born in Gibraltar and attended Gilbraltar Girls Comprehensive School 1 Finlayson earned her PhD in 2006 by the Anglia Ruskin University Cambridge UK where she presented the thesis Climate vegetation and biodiversity a multiscale study of the south of the Iberian Peninsula 2 Career editShe worked in the civil service of the Government of Gibraltar from 1981 to 1993 1 For many years Finlayson has studied the presence of Neanderthals in Gibraltar having performed several excavations in the region including underwater 2 Finlayson was Director of the John Mackintosh Hall from 1993 to 2011 During that time she oversaw a great many public functions including conferences exhibitions and concerts She is currently the CEO of the Gibraltar National Museum 2 She is also Co Director of the Underwater Research Unit URU the activities of which include surveying the seabed and caves for the Gibraltar Caves Project conducting a comprehensive survey of Gibraltar s Submerged Heritage for the Heritage Database and carrying out wreck surveys and pre disturbance surveys on archaeological sites Furthermore she is an Advanced Diver and Open Water Instructor with BS AC a Tutor with the Nautical Archaeology Society and a Senior Tutor at the Gibraltar Museum Research Interests edit Finlayson s research interests include the relationship among climate vegetation landscape features and biodiversity the spatio temporal distribution patterns of vegetation and animals focusing mainly on the Southern Iberian Peninsula and the Quaternary the cultural influences on the development of Gibraltarian cuisine and the study of Gilbraltar s underwater cultural heritage 2 Other professional activities editFinlayson gave a talk entitled The John Mackintosh Hall 40 years on on 13 April 2004 about the cultural and sports venue in Gibraltar 3 At the sixth Iberian Quaternary Congress in 2006 Finlayson presented an innovative method in which she reconstructed in fine detail the habitat of the Neanderthals outside Gorham s Cave 4 In 2008 Finlayson along with Prof Clive Finlayson and Dr Darren Fa visited Malta at the invitation of that nation s Superintendence of Cultural Heritage The team examined an archaeological dig and provided advice on the work underway They also discussed a possible long term collaborative project applying the Gibraltar model to the Maltese islands 5 Geraldine and Clive Finlayson gave a lecture on human evolution at the University of Granada in 2009 The lecture entitled The Luck of Man the role of historical contingency in human evolution traced the history of the evolution of Homo sapiens 6 In November 2010 Finlayson gave a lecture at the Annual Conference of the Nautical Archaeological Society NAS held at Portsmouth University in the UK Her presentation concerned the Gibraltar Method which had been developed by her and teammates in Gibraltar and which was now central to the study and protection of submerged heritage 7 Finlayson made a guest appearance as herself in the episode 48 Das dunkle Geheimnis der Neandertaler 2012 of the first season of the Austrian TV series Terra Mater 8 Finlayson gave a lecture in 2012 in Gibraltar as part of the series Hidden Worlds and Our Intangible Heritage 9 Finlayson gave representatives of the media a tour of Gorham s Cave during the annual expert exploration thereof in 2012 10 Lost world in Gibraltar edit Finlayson was one of the authors of a paper by Key to a lost world in Gibraltar that was published in 2013 in Geomorphology She explained to journalists that Gibraltar was once a Mediterranean Serengeti where deer wild horse and cattle grazed on the savannahs and were stalked by a strange mix of predators that included Spotted Hyaenas Leopards Brown Bears Wolves and Lynxes This was truly a bit of Africa in Europe Along with two earlier 2013 papers this was described by Finlayson as a remarkable output of scientific literature for such a small institution as the Gibraltar Museum comparable to the best research centres in European and North American universities We have been working very hard to make Gibraltar a Centre of Excellence and we are getting there We are grateful to the support that HM Government of Gibraltar has given us and we are optimistic that with this backing we can take Gibraltar to yet another level 11 Neanderthals cognitive capacity edit In September 2012 the Gibraltar Museum team led by Clive Finlayson and including Geraldine Finlayson published a paper in the journal PLOS One Birds of a feather which argued that Neanderthals had cognitive capacity which permitted them to think symbolically possibly by the use of ornamentation This was described by Clive Finlayson as a huge step forward in the understanding of Neanderthals In short the message was that the Neanderthals were thinking people and that they were able to extract from the environment for example by cutting the feathers and inner bones from the birds of prey they captured leaving them with the outer shell and using them as ornaments as has been the case in other cultures across the world 12 Books editThe Coastal Shelf of the Mediterranean and Beyond Corridor and Refugium for Human Populations in the Pleistocene edited with Geoffrey Bailey Jose S Carrion Darren A Fa Clive Finlayson and Joaquin Rodriguez Vidal 13 Biogeography of human colonisations and extinctions in the Pleistocene with Clive Finlayson and Darren Fa The Homo habitat niche Using the avian fossil record to depict ecological characteristics of Palaeolithic Eurasian hominins with Clive Finlayson et al Gibraltar at the end of the millennium a portrait of a changing land with Clive Finlayson 1999 14 Selected academic articles edit The Homo habitat niche using the avian fossil record to depict ecological characteristics of Palaeolithic Eurasian hominins with Clive Finlayson Jose Carrion Kimberly Brown Antonio Sanchez Marco Darren Fa Joaquin Rodriguez Vidal Santiago Fernandez Elena Fierro Marco Bernal Gomez Francisco Giles Pacheco Quaternary Science Reviews vol 30 no 11 pp 1525 1532 2011 Earliest Known Use of Marine Resources by Neanderthals with Miguel Cortes Sanchez Arturo Morales Muniz Maria D Simon Vallejo Maria C Lozano Francisco Jose L Vera Pelaez Clive Finlayson Joaquin Rodriguez Vidal Antonio Delgado Huertas Francisco J Jimenez Espejo Francisca Martinez Ruiz M Aranzazu Martinez Aguirre Arturo J Pascual Granged PLOS One vol 6 no 9 2011 A coastal reservoir of biodiversity for Upper Pleistocene human populations palaeoecological investigations in Gorham s Cave Gibraltar in the context of the Iberian Peninsula with J S Carrion C Finlayson S Fernandez E Allue J A Lopez Saez P Lopez Garcia G Gil Romera G Bailey P Gonzalez Samperiz Quaternary Science Reviews vol 27 no 23 pp 2118 2135 2008 Caves as archives of ecological and climatic changes in the Pleistocene The case of Gorham s cave Gibraltar with C Finlayson F Giles Pacheco J Rodriguez Vidal J S Carrion J M Recio Espejo Quaternary International vol 181 no 1 pp 55 63 2008 Gorham s Cave Gibraltar The persistence of a Neanderthal population with Clive Finlayson Darren A Fa Francisco Jimenez Espejo Jose S Carrion Francisco Giles Pacheco Joaquin Rodriguez Vidal Chris Stringer Francisca Martinez Ruiz Quaternary International QUATERN INT vol 181 no 1 pp 64 71 2008 The coastal shelf of the Mediterranean and beyond Corridor and refugium for human populations in the Pleistocene with Geoff Bailey Jose S Carrion Darren A Fa Clive Finlayson Joaquin Rodriguez Vidal Quaternary Science Reviews vol 27 no 23 pp 2095 2099 2008 Dynamics of a thermo Mediterranean coastal environment the Coto Donana National Park with Clive Finlayson J M Recio Espejo Quaternary Science Reviews vol 27 no 23 pp 2145 2152 2008 Climate forcing and Neanderthal extinction in Southern Iberia insights from a multiproxy marine record with Francisco J Jimenez Espejo Francisca Martinez Ruiz Clive Finlayson Adina Paytan Tatsuhiko Sakamoto Miguel Ortega Huertas Koichi Iijima David Gallego Torres Darren Fa Quaternary Science Reviews vol 26 no 7 pp 836 852 2007 Did the moderns kill off the Neanderthals A reply to F d Errico and Sanchez Goni with Clive Finlayson Darren A Fa Francisco Giles Pacheco Joaquin Rodri guez Vidal Quaternary Science Reviews vol 23 no 9 pp 1205 1209 2004 Did the moderns kill off the Neanderthals A reply to F d Errico and Sanchez Goni with C Finlayson D A Fa F G Pacheco J R Vidal Quaternary Science Reviews vol 23 pp 1205 1209 2004 Ecological transitions But for whom A perspective from the Pleistocene with Clive Finlayson Antonio Monclova Jose S Carrion Darren A Fa Joaquin Rodriguez Vidal Elena Fierro Santiago Fernandez Marco Bernal Gomez Francisco Giles Pacheco Palaeogeography Palaeoclimatology Palaeoecology The tools of the last Neanderthals Morphotechnical characterisation of the lithic industry at level IV of Gorham s Cave Gibraltar with Francisco Giles Pacheco Francisco J Giles Guzman Jose Maria Gutierrez Lopez Antonio Santiago Perez Clive Finlayson Joaquin Rodriguez Vidal Darren A Fa Quaternary International El registro altitudinal de cambio climatico en series karsticas pleistocenas de las Beticas occidentales Evidence of climate change at different altitudes within the karstic regions of the western Betic Range during the Late Pleistocene with J Rodriguez Vidal L M Caceres A Martinez Aguirre J M Alcaraz C Finlayson Honors and awards editIn 2003 Finlayson and the rest of the Gibraltar Museum team were awarded first prize in the National Archeological Society s Adopt a Wreck programme for their work on the armed trawler HMS Erin and in 2006 Geraldine was granted the Gibraltar Award in the Queen s Birthday Honours List 15 In 2018 Finlayson was appointed Adjunct Professor at Liverpool John Moores University s Faculty of Science 16 In 2019 Finlayson was bestowed the Gibraltar Medallion of Distinction together with her husband Clive for their work on Gorham s Cave 17 Personal life editFinlayson s husband Clive Finlayson is an evolutionary ecologist who is Curator at the Gibraltar National Museum and who along with his wife participates in digs in the Neanderthal caves in Gibraltar and elsewhere He keeps a blog about these activities at clivehumanevo blogspot com 18 and they have collaborated on many papers and other writings He is the author of the book Neanderthals and Modern Humans They have a son together 19 References edit a b Geraldine Finlayson LinkedIn a b c d Geraldine Finlayson Gibraltar National Museum Retrieved 9 July 2017 The John Mackintosh Hall Forty Years On Gibraltar gov The Iberian Peninsula and its peopling by Hominids The Gibraltar Chronicle Gibraltar archaeologists to visit Times of Malta Gibraltar Museum in Granada University SUR in English Dr Gerladine Finlayson Ocean Treasures Internet Movie Database ed Geraldine Finlayson Retrieved 25 September 2012 388 2012 Museum Spring 2012 Lecture Series Hidden Worlds and Our Intangible Heritage a talk by Dr Geraldine Finlayson noodles Going Paperless Archaeology in Europe Articles Gibraltar News Gorham s Cave reveals a brainier Neanderthal walked our shores Gibraltar Chronicle Re The continental shelf hypothesis M Verhaegen amp S Munro 2002 Nutrition and Health 16 25 27 Science Tech Archive Gibraltar at the end of the millennium a portrait of a changing land ISBNS Recounting our Underwater Heritage Ocean Treasures Clive and Geraldine Finlayson given professional appointments at Liverpool John Moores University Gibraltar Chronicle Gibraltar Chronicle Retrieved 14 October 2023 2019 recipients of Gibraltar Medallions of Honour and Distinction announced Gibraltar National Museum Gibraltar National Museum Retrieved 14 October 2023 Getting the job done Clive Finlayson s Human Evolution Blog Gibraltar Chronicle ed 5 July 2012 Gorham s Cave excavation set for summer Archived from the original on 2 December 2013 Retrieved 25 September 2012 External links editGeraldine Finlayson on Twitter nbsp Gibraltar Museum in Granada University Preparations underway for a major excavation at Gorham s and Vanguard Caves PDF Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Geraldine Finlayson amp oldid 1214717588, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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