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Archaeology Magazine News Archive
2008-2012


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Friday, July 10
July 10, 2009

Archaeologists have returned to the Great House Pueblo at the Chimney Rock Archaeological Area in southwestern Colorado for the first time in 30 years. They think the Great House was constructed to view the lunar standstill that occurs approximately every 18 years. “We’ve found pieces of burned beams we can carbon-date to help verify whether the major building episodes here correspond with lunar standstills,” said University of Colorado graduate student Brenda Todd. 

 Artifacts discovered beneath a nineteenth-century cabin at the Cowell Lime Works Historic District include a mother-of-pearl hairpin, suggesting that the male workers had contact with women. “The reason we’re doing the archaeology is to try to understand what the everyday life of the workers was like. There’s not much record of that,” said environmental planner and archaeologist Sally Morgan. The lime works has become part of the University of California, Santa Cruz.  

A skull uncovered at a construction site in West Virginia last week may have belonged to a 13- or 14-year-old African American girl, and could date to the early nineteenth century.  

Construction workers in northern California unearthed the skeleton of an American Indian thought to have belonged to the Bay Miwok tribe. The remains are being held by Contra Costa County officials until the state decides which tribal descendants have a legal claim to the bones.  

The High Arctic search for Sir John Franklin’s ships, the Erebus and Terror, has been called off for the summer by the Canadian government. “Unfortunately this particular season, the Coast Guard had other scientific programs that they had to prioritize. But we intend to continue with the survey next year,” said Ryan Harris of Parks Canada.   

According to a report presented by UNESCO officials at a meeting in Paris, “The use of Babylon as a military base was a grave encroachment on this internationally known archaeological site.” This article has a few more details and photographs.  

There’s also more information on the 69 artifacts returned to Iraq by the Netherlands.  

Al-Ahram describes the museum show, “Tutankhamun, The Golden King and the Great Pharaohs,” now on display at the Children’s Museum of Indianapolis.

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Thursday, July 9
July 9, 2009

Swiss researchers digging in eastern Mali claim to have discovered Africa’s oldest piece of ceramic, a “tiny, ornate fragment that was made with great skill and the use of fire,” according to ethno-archaeologist Anne Mayor. The pottery dates to 9,400 B.C.

UNESCO experts have listed the damage done to Babylon by U.S. troops and contractors, adding that the ancient city could finally be added to the World Heritage list within two years. Trenches were dug, hilltops were bulldozed, and military vehicles were driven over paved procession paths. Babylon has not been named a World Heritage site because of changes made to the ruins under the rule of Saddam Hussein.   

Dutch police retrieved 69 artifacts looted from Iraq after a tip from U.S. customs authorities and Interpol. The items will be displayed at the Dutch National Museum for Antiquities before they are shipped back to Iraq.   

Scientists have a DNA match between hairs collected from one of Copernicus’ personal books, and bone fragments discovered buried in a tomb beneath the cathedral in Frombork, Poland.   

A California developer has begun the construction of a house on top of six of 30 identified Native Hawaiian burials on his property in Kaua’i, despite opposition from the Kaua’i Burial Council. He argues that he has complied with the preservation law by covering the burials with cement caps and building the house on piers.   

James Adovasio of Mercyhurst College has returned to the Gulf of Mexico this summer to look for traces of the first Americans. “There’s no doubt that early North American occupations are underwater, but it’s like looking for a needle in a haystack. We have found the haystack; now we’ve got to find the needles,” he said. 

Coins and a mead mug are among the artifacts discovered by international students digging at Heraklea, in Macedonia.   

Students in Denmark were surprised to find more than 200 sets of human remains during their field school in the Illerup River Valley. “This was a defeated army that was sacrificed to the lake at the time. The majority of remains are large arm and leg bones, skulls, shoulder blades, and pelvises,” said Ejvind Hertz of the Skanderborg Museum.  

The New York Times has more information about the plan to build a tourist destination around a Roman-era mosaic in Lod, Israel. The 1,700-year-old floor was discovered 13 years ago, but only put on display for one weekend before it was reburied.

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