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Archaeology Magazine News Archive
2008-2012


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Monday, February 4
by Jessica E. Saraceni
February 4, 2008

A 300-year-old note listing the cost of decorating pigments was discovered within an eighteenth-century Chinese vase at Fairfax House in northern England.

Human remains from the Woodland period (2000 B.C. to 1000 A.D.) were uncovered during the construction of a drywall plant along the Tennessee River. The bones will be moved to an undisclosed site. 

The New York Times asks why the smuggled-artifacts-for-tax-breaks scandal rocking California museums is such a big deal, even suggesting that “to the average observer the operation might be dismissed as low-stakes international intrigue.” Joyce C. White of the University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology answers the question. She examined Southeast Asian artifacts seized by federal agents and testified before a grand jury. 

Three German U-boats that were scuttled at the end of World War II have been found at the bottom of the Black Sea near the coast of Turkey. “It is quite an incredible story. To get to the Black Sea these boats had to be taken across the land, and once they got there they had no way out,” said marine engineer Selcuk Kolay, who established the boats’ positions through research and interviews. 

Renovation of Washington Square Park continues in New York City’s Greenwich Village, and more human bones have been dug up. The park was created in 1850, but before that, the land was used as a potters’ field. “The bones were mixed in with nails and other construction debris, which indicates that they have been dug up in previous excavations and used to fill construction sites,” according to a statement from the Parks Department.

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