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Archaeology Magazine News Archive
2008-2012


Visit www.archaeology.org/news for the latest archaeological headlines!

Tuesday, August 12
by Jessica E. Saraceni
August 12, 2008

Four 8,000-year-old skeletons are the oldest so far to be unearthed during excavations for Istanbul’s new subway. The project has also uncovered 32 ships, and walls that may have been the first city walls of Istanbul.

The skull of a giant kangaroo found in Tasmania has been dated to 41,000 years ago, 2,000 years after humans are thought to have arrived on the island. “Up until now, people thought that the Tasmanian mega-fauna had actually gone extinct before people arrived on the island,” said Richard Roberts of the University of Wollongong. Did early hunters wipe out mega-fauna?  

Yesterday marked the beginning of Egypt’s plan to keep peddlers away from the Giza pyramids with a security fence. “It was a zoo. Now we are protecting both the tourists and the ancient monuments,” said Zahi Hawass, general secretary of the Supreme Council of Antiquities.  

Two sets of human remains were found beneath the floorboards of 400-year-old St. George’s Church in Bermuda. One of the skeletons is thought to have belonged to a British Naval commander who died of yellow fever in 1783.  

A European woman’s skull found four years ago in New Zealand has been carbon dated to decades before Captain Cook arrived in 1769. “We’ve got the problem of how did this woman get here? Who was she?” asked forensic anthropologist Robin Watt.  

National Geographic News has more information on the 2,500-year-old Greek ship raised off the southern coast of Gela, Sicily, last month.  

Photographs of tumbled columns, and a coin bearing an image of a temple to Zeus and Tyche, are included in this BBC News article on the Roman temple discovered at Sepphoris.   

There’s more on the mapping of Neanderthal mitochondrial DNA in this article from The Independent. “What we’ve done is confirm that the mitochondrial DNA of Neanderthals and modern humans was so different that it forms powerful evidence that there was very little if any interbreeding between the two species,” said Adrian Briggs of the Max Planck Institute.

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