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Archaeology Magazine News Archive
2008-2012


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

Wednesday, February 20
by Jessica E. Saraceni
February 20, 2008

Remnants of at least ten pyramids and an adobe platform constructed by the Vicus culture, which flourished between 200 B.C. and 300 A.D., were uncovered on the coast of Peru.

The discovery of what’s been called a Druid’s burial chamber near the ancient city of Camulodunum in southeast England is discussed in Spiegel Online.  

An archaeologist and an architectural historian say that Ireland’s famous Blarney Stone really is full of blarney. They claim that the kissable rock in Blarney Castle has only been in use since 1888, and is not a piece of the original Stone of Scone, said to have been given to the Irish king Cormac MacCarthy by Scotland’s Robert the Bruce in 1314.  

Excavations in Scotland revealed a Neolithic pot made of local materials that resembles those made in the Netherlands. “The grave is so early and the style of ceramic is so rare for this period that it’s either an immigrant or a first or second generation descendant who still knows these techniques,” said Martin Cook, the project officer.  

Italy’s minister of culture, Francesco Rutelli, and two museum directors were interviewed about the illegal antiquities trade by Jeffrey Brown for PBS.  

National Geographic News takes on the so-called “greatest discovery in China after Peking Man,” said to be the skull fragments of a modern human tentatively dated to 80,000 to 100,000 years ago. But Chris Stringer of the Human Origins Program at London’s Natural History Museum, and Erik Trinkaus of Washington University, have seen photographs of the fossils, and they believe it is more likely that the Henan skull belongs to an earlier species.  

Here’s an update on the use of satellite images to locate Maya sites in Guatemala.

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