Archaeology Magazine Archive

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Archaeology Magazine News Archive
2008-2012


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Monday, September 21
September 21, 2009

An undisturbed tomb where the some 30 people had been buried has been found in a royal palace at Syria’s ancient trading crossroads of Qatna.    This article has a different photograph.

Archaeologist Bill Silva has been assisting police with the examination of the grounds where Jaycee Dugard was held captive for 18 years in California.”We have set it up just like an archaeological site, where we are looking for real ephemeral remains. This is the first crime scene I’ve worked on, unless you consider a Native American massacre site,” he said.   

Nine hilltop palaces at the Maya site of Kiuic could help archaeologists understand the moment that the people abandoned their city 1,000 years ago and headed north. “The people just walked away and left everything in place,” said George Bey of Millsaps College.  

Learn more about building an ultra-modern tunnel under the Bosphorus, and the spectacular discovery of the ancient port of Theodosius, in this article from CNN.  

In England, the Bingham Heritage Trails Association wants to move a Roman well unearthed during road construction in order to preserve it. “We’ve got a great deal of information about the Roman occupation in Bingham and absolutely nothing is visible, it’s all under ploughed fields,” explained chairman Peter Allen.  

The Israel Antiquities Authority is beginning to unearth a Roman amphitheater discovered 19 years ago near Tiberias. The theater seated more than 7,000 people.  

Hunters have used rock shelters in Ohio for more than 10,000 years.  

Take a short trip in the way-back machine to the summer of 1969, when students from Illinois State University worked on a dig in Presidio, Texas. This article tells us what those kids and their professors are doing now.  

Here’s more information on the presumed Scorpion, a ship archaeologists have found in a Maryland marsh that may have defended the Chesapeake Bay during the War of 1812.

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Friday, September 18
September 18, 2009

Fifty new graves have been discovered at the sixth-century B.C. cemetery known as Arhontiko, in Greece. Two bronze helmets with gold inlay, iron weapons, gold ornaments, statuettes, and pottery were found within the graves.

Mokumanamana (Necker) Island is a remote island in the northwestern Hawaiian Islands. Scientists recently spent 18 days scouring the difficult, rocky terrain, mapping its 34 heiau, or religious structures. “There are few cases in Hawaii where you can see an intact cultural landscape with nearly 100 percent native plants and animals,” said Kekuewa Kikiloi of the University of Hawaii.   More photographs of the island and its artifacts can be seen in the Honolulu Advertiser.  

Members of Tasmania’s Aboriginal community want work on a bypass to stop, saying that artifacts have been found on the site. “It would be cultural vandalism on an extreme scale,” said Michael Mansell, an Aboriginal lawyer and activist.  

Historian Tom Brooks claims that Britain’s Stone Age hilltop monuments were part of an ancient navigational aid made up of a grid of isosceles triangles.  

Here’s another article on the first sentencing after the federal government crackdown on the illegal trafficking of American Indian artifacts in the Southwest. Two women from Blanding, Utah, received probation and fines after pleading guilty to felonies and surrendering more than 800 objects.   

The FBI says that their secret search for underground evidence in a Detroit lumberyard has been “successful.” An archaeologist and forensic anthropologists from Michigan State assisted in the dig.

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