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Thursday, March 11
March 11, 2010

 Discovery News has picked up the story on the discovery of a 40,000-year-old site in Tasmania, adding that the area had been a meeting ground for three tribes of Aboriginal people, and their last refuge when European colonists arrived in the late eighteenth century. “The Tasmanian government must immediately declare it a protected site, not just for Aboriginal people but for peoples of the world,” said Michael Mansell of the Tasmanian Aboriginal Centre.

Polished axes, chisels made from sea shells, and pottery were uncovered in northern Cuba. Archaeologists think there may have been a settlement close to the shore and agricultural fields inland.  

A World War II camp and what may have been a seventeenth-century military camp held by Oliver Cromwell have been found at the site of a proposed water treatment plant in Scotland. “There are also some written reports of Oliver Cromwell staying with a local landowner nearby, and we have uncovered musket balls which could possibly date from that era,” said project manager Bruce Glendinning.  

Double burial, or the practice of digging up decomposing bodies in order to detach the limbs and head and then reburying the all of the parts, was practiced by the people of the Cape Region of Baja California Sur for 4,500 years. Not much else is known about the culture.  

Bulgaria’s Starosel Tomb has been re-dated to the fourth century B.C., during the reign of the Thracian king Amatokos II.   

Five people have come forward claiming to be descendants of Edward Salter, who is believed to have been a member of Blackbeard’s pirate crew. Skeletal remains that may have belonged to Salter have been held at the state archaeologist’s office of North Carolina since 1986. “The Office of State Archaeology is working with all of the claimants to reach a consensus regarding the disposition of the human skeletal remains,” according to a recent report.   

Here’s more information on the ancient coffin recently returned to Egypt by U.S. customs officials.  

Villagers are reportedly encroaching upon the tomb of Cyrus I, which was discovered in 1960. The site is on Iran’s National Heritage List.

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Wednesday, March 10
March 10, 2010

 At the site of a major road construction project in Tasmania, archaeologists say they have found evidence of the oldest, most southern site of human habitation in the world. “The dates that we’ve got so far, the readings, they’ve been nice and statistically tight, and that suggests to me they’re probably correct,” said head archaeologist Robert Paton.

The location of a fourth gate has been discovered at the northern end of the tomb complex of China’s first emperor, Qin Shihuangdi, known for his terracotta army. The gate was probably made of wood and mounted on a platform made of rammed earth.  

Italian archaeologists have discovered a Buddhist-era site in Pakistan’s Swat Valley.   

Digging will commence later this month at New Place, William Shakespeare’s home at the time of his death in 1616. Archaeologists hope to find artifacts in the waterlogged soil of old wells. “Six test pits excavated last October gave us confidence that this will be a productive dig. Who knows, we might find one of Shakespeare’s shoes, some of his discarded correspondence or even some of his personal effects,” exclaimed Diana Owen, director of the Shakespeare Birthplace Trust.   

Artists are assisting researchers who want to know if the empty eye sockets in Pictish carvings may have been filled with glass eyes. “We find many pieces with drilled eye holes but haven’t ever found anything in them. It has been exciting experimenting with different colors and finishes of glass,” said Alice Blackwell of the National Museum of Scotland.  

Gershon Galil of the University of Haifa claims to have found the town of Neta’im, mentioned in the biblical book 1 Chronicles. He says the pottery shards and burned olive pits unearthed at the site, known as Khirbet Qeiyafa, were left by potters in King David’s service.   

Here are some photographs of the Roman and Byzantine-era tombs uncovered in Syria, where human remains, tools, jewelry, and pots have been found.  

The Egyptian government will restore the country’s 11 historic Jewish synagogues.  

The Society for Commercial Archaeology has named the 103-year-old Buckhorn Baths Motel in Mesa, Arizona, the most endangered roadside place in the U.S. The hotel was once a favorite spot of celebrities and baseball players.   The second most-endangered roadside attraction is the Giant Orange, an orange-shaped juice stand in Sacramento, California.  

Wreckage of the salvaged Nazi ship, the Admiral Graf Spee, should be displayed in a museum, according to German Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle. “We want to prevent wreckage from the ship, in particular the Nazi symbols, from landing on the market for military insignia,” he explained.

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