Archaeology Magazine Archive

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Archaeology Magazine News Archive
2008-2012


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Friday, May 1
May 1, 2009

An international team of scientists has studied the DNA of modern American Indian groups and has found genetic evidence that they are all descended from a single ancestral population. In addition, that population was isolated from the rest of Asia for thousands of years before moving into the New World. “While earlier studies have already supported this conclusion, what’s different about our work is that it provides the first solid data that simply cannot be reconciled with multiple ancestral populations,” said Kari Britt Schroeder of the University of California, Davis.

Africans, however, have more genetic variation than anyone else on Earth. “Given the fact that modern humans arose in Africa, they have had time to accumulate dramatic changes,” said Sarah Tishkoff of the University of Pennsylvania.  

A CT scan revealed a mummified puppy inside a bundle at the feet of an Egyptian human mummy. Researchers at the University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology have dubbed them “Hapi-Puppy” and “Hapi-Men,” respectively.  

A pit at the former site of England’s Worcester Royal Infirmary contained some 200 pieces of cut human and animal bones. Archaeologist Simon Sworn says the bones bear marks of amputations and human dissection, which became legal in the early nineteenth century.   

Two villages surrounded by palisades were discovered at a construction site at Georgia’s Macon County Airport. “We had no idea there were palisaded villages in 1100 A.D.,” said archaeologist Tasha Benyshek.  

English Heritage has recreated the Tudor garden at Kenilworth Castle that was planted in 1575 by Robert Dudley, the Earl of Leicester, to woo and impress Queen Elizabeth I. She refused him.  

Pot hunters have targeted the military base at Quantico, according to this article at Military.com. “We are developing procedures and forms to monitor archaeological sites for instances such as relic hunting or looting,” said Sue Goodfellow, a cultural resources specialist for Headquarters Marine Corps.  

The Myers Museum at England’s Eton College has returned more than 450 artifacts to Egypt that had been taken out of the country between 1972 and 1988.

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Thursday, April 30
April 30, 2009

An eighteenth-century imperial seal that was taken from the Summer Palace in Beijing in the nineteenth century has been sold by a French auction house despite protests from the Chinese government.

Public toilets thought to have been used as bunkers during the Spanish Civil War have been found beneath the streets of the town of Berja.   

The National Archaeological Museum in Naples will reopen its fresco section after a ten-year renovation project. More than 400 wall paintings from Pompeii are now arranged in chronological and thematic order.  

Here’s an introduction to the great Hobbit debate.  

National Geographic News has picked up the story about the “Dark Age” (1200 to 900 B.C.) temple unearthed in southeastern Turkey at Tell Ta’yinat, where archaeologists have found evidence suggesting that the transition from the Bronze Age to the Iron Age may not have been as turbulent as written sources indicate. “We are filling in a cultural and a political history of this era,” said Timothy Harrison of the University of Toronto.  

Learn a few more details about the millefiori dish discovered in a Roman grave in London in this article from Reuters. “For it to have survived intact is amazing. In fact, it is unprecedented in the western Roman world,” said Jenny Hall, curator of the Roman collection at the Museum of London.

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