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Friday, August 13
August 13, 2010

Turkish authorities have arrested five people out of the ten who were detained in a raid near the town of Milas. They are accused of digging two tunnels to reach a buried tomb containing a 2,800-year-old sarcophagus and frescoes. “This is not an ordinary treasure hunt. It is very organized and it is obvious that they received economic and scientific help,” said Culture Minister Ertugrul Gunay.

Vibrations caused by heavy construction vehicles have damaged the 10,000-year-old city of Hasankeyf, located in southeastern Turkey. Last month, a man was killed when a rock fell from a cracked tower. The city is expected to be flooded with the construction of the Ilisu Dam is completed.  

Hundreds of olive pits found at a 2,300-year-old shipwreck off the coast of Cyprus indicate that they were probably a staple of the crew’s diet.  

Excavations at Old College, Edinburgh University, could yield the remains of Lord Darnley, Mary Queen of Scots’ second husband. Lord Darnley’s lodgings at the university were destroyed by an explosion in 1567, and he and his valet were found strangled in the garden. The murder was never solved, and the grounds have been heavily disturbed over the years.  

CNN has picked up the story of the reliquary discovered on an island in the Black Sea that has been making headlines in Bulgaria. The stone box is said to hold some bones of John the Baptist. Archaeologist Kazimir Popkonstantinov says that the bones and the reliquary will be tested for their age, and whether the bones belonged to a man or a woman. “As far as I know there is no database with DNA profiles of the saints. Here, I believe, the science stops,” he quipped.  

Ernest Shackleton’s crate of Scotch whisky that was recovered from the Antarctic ice in 2006 has been thawed out in New Zealand. Master blenders will try to re-create the blend, but the historic beverages will be preserved and returned to the explorer’s hut.  

In this picture, Jaromir Malek of Oxford University holds an original glass negative from Howard Carter’s archive of photographs and notes on King Tut’s tomb. Malek has made Carter’s records available online to all. “We hope that this will help bring the knowledge and love of ancient Egypt to everybody. It really belongs to the world,” he said.

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Thursday, August 12
August 12, 2010

Cut and smashed animal bones discovered in Ethiopia are could indicate tool use by Australopithecus afarensis, according to research team member Zeresenay Alemseged of the California Academy of Sciences. “For 30 years, no one has been able to put stone tools in their hands, and we’ve done that for the first time,” he said. The findings would push back the use of tools by 800,000 years, and could also be the earliest evidence for meat eating among hominins. Other scientists are not convinced. “An extraordinary claim requires extraordinary evidence. The evidence is very thin here, and very ambiguous,” commented Tim White of the University of California.

Bones found in a Spanish cave suggest that Homo antecessor individuals butchered and ate each other, in addition to mammoths, buffalo, and cats. “This practice, accepted and included in their social system, is the oldest example of cultural cannibalism known to date,” concluded the study published in Current Anthropology.  

John Boardman of the University of Oxford thinks that the Phoenician port city of Auza was probably closer to Egypt and Phoenicia than scholars have assumed. “This is simply a matter of making a suggestion of where the place is actually to be located on a map. Too many people have wanted to put it much too far away,” he explained.  

Modern humans have long throats and small mouths suitable for talking. “The first time we see human skulls – fossils – that have everything in place is about 50,000 years ago where the neck is long enough, the mouth is short enough, that they could have had a vocal tract like us,” said Philip Lieberman of Brown University.  

Europe’s massive prehistoric tombs seem to have been built during a few hundred years around 4000 B.C., according to Chris Scarre of Durham University. “It trivializes the tombs to call it a fad, but building such structures seems to have become a fashion where great numbers were built and then there was a cessation for centuries,” he said.  

A gold coin was unearthed in Israel, at the site of Tel Kedesh. The coin was minted by the Egyptian Ptolemies, and is the heaviest ever found in Israel.  

Parks Canada archaeologists continue to search for the lost ships of the Franklin Expedition, HMS Erebus, and HMS Terror. “Basically what we’re working on in nineteenth century Inuit testimony, Inuit accounts, as to where they saw one of these ships come to rest. Those stories were collected by search expeditions that were looking for the Franklin expedition,” said senior marine archaeologist Ryan Harris.

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