Archaeology Magazine Archive

A publication of the Archaeological Institute of America

Special Introductory Offer!
latest news
Archaeology Magazine News Archive
2008-2012


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

Monday, April 18
by Jessica E. Saraceni
May 18, 2009

Over the weekend, archaeologists and volunteers experimented with special flares to study how early Navajos could have used towers and smoke signals to warn their neighbors about invaders. “If you hear an enemy approaching, you climb into these things and pull up the ladder, and you can seal yourself in for a while,” said Ron Maldonado of the Navajo Nation Historic Preservation Department.

Find out why we yell “Geronimo!” when jumping off something, and other folklore about the Apache medicine man.   

Greece objects to the Macedonian plan to erect a giant statue of Alexander the Great, the ancient king of Macedon, in its modern capital, Skopje.   

A new study of the Waorani, called “the most murderous people on Earth,” has found that the Waorani warriors’ endless cycle of revenge has led to less reproductive success than that of the Yanomamo, whose violence is followed by peaceful times. It had been thought that aggressive men ended up with more wives and children.  

A 47-million-year-old fossil discovered in Germany may be a possible ancestor of higher primates.   

An excavation and preservation project is planned for the Laetoli footsteps, in the Ngorongoro Conservation Area in Tanzania.  The fossilized footsteps show that two Australopithecus afarensis individuals were walking upright, side-by-side, 3.6 million years ago.  

In the Al Dour area of the United Arab Emirates, archaeologists have uncovered artifacts spanning a 3,000-year-long period, including pottery dating to the third millennium B.C., bronze spearheads from the first millennium B.C., and 2,000-year-old iron tools, beads, and fish bones.  

A new exhibition spread across three German museums revisits the defeat of the Romans at the Battle of Teutoburg Forest and the idea that the Roman Empire withdrew from Germany afterwards. Historians now suggest that the Romans appointed Germanic tribal leaders and probably maintained a system of client states. “They interfered using diplomatic rather than military methods,” said Guenther Moosbauer.  

The Serpon Sugar Mill in Belize has been declared an archaeological reserve. The sugar mill, established in 1865, was abandoned in 1910.  

Here’s a bit more information on the stucco panels depicting scenes from the Popol Vuh that were found in Guatemala by Idaho State University’s Richard Hansen. The panels date to 300 B.C. “We can now extend the authenticity of the creation myth back another 1,000 years,” he said.  

A Colorado man faces federal looting charges after his ex-wife reported him to the authorities. She said she didn’t want the man to teach their son to loot.

Comments posted here do not represent the views or policies of the Archaeological Institute of America.

Comments are closed.




Advertisement


Advertisement