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UWF archaeologists turn real discoveries into children’s book series

August 6, 2025 | UWF Newsroom

Luna the Cat Children's Book with Michael Thomin and Nicole Grinnan
Image courtesy of UWF Newsroom

This article is courtesy of the UWF Newsroom:

Two University of West Florida archaeologists have transformed their passion for public outreach and historical storytelling into a new children’s book inspired by real archaeological discoveries made off the Florida coast. “Luna the Cat,” follows a feline protagonist on board a Spanish ship in the 1500s and is based on a real-life cat whose remains were uncovered at the site of the 1559 Emanuel Point shipwrecks excavated by UWF archaeologists.

Michael Thomin, assistant director of education and interpretation for the Florida Public Archaeology Network, and Nicole Grinnan, assistant director of the University of West Florida’s Archaeology Institute, decided to co-author the book after realizing that most archaeology books didn’t speak to the K-12 students in their children’s archaeology programs in the way they desired.

Read the rest of this story on the UWF Newsroom, here.