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Archaeology Magazine News Archive
2008-2012


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Tuesday, December 15
December 15, 2009

 Flowers have been found in a 4,000-year-old grave in Scotland. Pollen has found at other sites, but scientists could not rule out that it didn’t come from honey or mead. “These are the first proof that people in the Bronze Age were actually placing flowers with burials,” said Kenneth Brophy of the University of Glasgow.  

Bones from seven individuals were unearthed in the basement of a home in Philadelphia. “They are going to be scientifically examined by archaeologists. It’s told to me that it’s believed that these bones could be more than 100 years old, and we’re trying to find out what exactly brought them to that location,” explained a police officer.  

A 250,000-year-old genetic mutation that regulates chronic inflammation may be responsible for humans outliving other primates. Scientists think the change is an evolutionary response to eating red meat. “I suggest that it arose to lower the risk of degenerative disease from the high-fat meat diet they consumed. Another benefit is that it promoted brain development,” said biologist Caleb Finch of the University of Southern California.  

Construction work at Indonesian Islamic University uncovered a well-built temple dating between the eighth and tenth centuries. “Only a temple of high importance for its time used this kind of material. This is why the reliefs have remained intact despite their age,” said Indung Panca Putra of the Yogyakarta Prehistoric Legacy Conservation Center.

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Monday, December 14
December 14, 2009

 Deforestation, air travel, and satellite imagery have allowed archaeologists to spot the signs of an ancient civilization in the Amazon basin. “Every week we find new structures,” said Denise Schaan of the Federal University of Pará in Brazil.

Here’s a photograph of France’s President, Nicolas Sarkozy, with Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak, during the hand-over of a wall painting from a raided tomb in the Valley of the Kings. Egypt had demanded that the artifacts be returned and cut ties with the Louvre Museum to drive the point home.  

Recent archaeological discoveries in Seoul, Korea, have brought attention to the country’s preservation laws. “If city development projects in Seoul continue in the way that they’re conducted now, it’s just a matter of time before the history of the city totally disappears,” said Ji Geon-gil of the Cultural Heritage Administration.  

In Iraq, the site of the Babylonian city of Shadupum has reportedly been left unguarded since 2003.   

Restoration of the storage facilities at Istanbul’s Topkapi Palace Museum, which was the seat of the Ottoman Empire for 380 years, is planned. Some 80,000 artifacts are housed there.  

Wild Dingoes are capable of attending to human gestures without special training, just as domesticated dogs do. Australia’s wild dogs are descended from semi-domesticated dogs from Southeast Asia.  

Archaeoastronomer Alun Salt’s study of the orientation of Greek temples on Sicily is in the news again. Salt thinks that temples in the Greek colonies were built to face the sunrise in order to strengthen their ties to mainland Greece, even though such an alignment is less frequent on the mainland.   

The eleventh-century metalworking site in York, England, which may have served as a Viking weapons center, is featured in National Geographic News. “Any metal was a precious material that would be recycled. Whoever won a fight in this period would collect what was left on the battlefield,” said Søren Sindbæk of the University of York.

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