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

Wednesday, May 19
by Jessica E. Saraceni
May 19, 2010

Four intact coffins made of clay were unearthed during construction work in eastern Cyprus. The coffins are about 2,000 years old. Human skeletal remains and glass and terracotta vessels were also found.

National Geographic Daily News reports on the discovery of the “oldest known Central American pyramid tomb” at Mexico’s Chiapa de Corzo site, with plenty of detail and a photograph of the pyramid’s exterior. “We are trying to distill from the archaeology how the Zoque emerged out of an Olmec ancestral base, and it seems like it happened right around the time this tomb appeared,” said Bruce Bachand of Brigham Young University.  Additional photographs from the excavation are offered here.  

Some of the leftover bandages used to mummify Tutankhamun are on display at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City. They had been stored at the museum in “a rather overlooked cache of large ceramic jars.” The jars were found sometime between 1907 and 1908, before Howard Carter opened Tut’s tomb.  

An Anglo-Saxon settlement dating to between the sixth and eighth centuries has been uncovered in Gloucestershire, England. “It would now appear that there were more pockets of Anglo-Saxon control in the Severn Valley than we previously thought,” said Cliff Bateman of Cotswold Archaeology.  

Archaeologists and volunteers working together at Charles Towne Landing in South Carolina unearthed a tabby floor, made of lime and crushed oyster shells, dating to the 1690s. “It would be nice to find a way to keep it clean and show it to visitors,” said assistant archaeologist Cisek Beeby.  

Civil War soldier Lt. Alonzo Cushing of Wisconsin will be awarded the Medal of Honor by the U.S. Army. Cushing died on July 3, 1863, the last day of the Battle of Gettysburg, while defending the Union position on Cemetery Ridge against Pickett’s Charge. The battle was a turning point in the war.  

New Zealand will preserve its last operational whaling station as a tourist attraction. “We must be careful to keep the historic fabric intact. We have to repair, but we must retain the integrity and adhere to conservation principles,” said Steve Bagley of the Department of Conservation. The day after the Perano whaling station closed in 1964, the country banned all whaling.  

More graves have been moved in Israel to make way for construction. This time, more than 1,000 medieval Muslim burials were exhumed inorder to make way for a Museum of Tolerance funded by the Simon Wiesenthal Center, which is based in Los Angeles. The newspaper Haaretz has printed claims made by workers that the bones were damaged and mistreated in a rushed excavation.

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