Archaeology Magazine Archive

A publication of the Archaeological Institute of America

Special Introductory Offer!
latest news
Archaeology Magazine News Archive
2008-2012


Visit www.archaeology.org/news for the latest archaeological headlines!

Friday, March 14
March 14, 2008

A large temple used by both the Inca and pre-Inca cultures was found at Sacsayhuaman archaeological park near Cuzco, Peru. Part of the building was destroyed 100 years ago by dynamite blasts from rock quarrying.

On the Greek island of Rhodes, a heavy rainstorm toppled large stones from the main entrance gate of the medieval Palace of the Grand Maitre.  

Here’s an update on Jacana, a Taino ceremonial field called the most important archaeological treasure ever found in Puerto Rico. Be sure to view the video for a look at the site’s features and petroglyphs.  

A U.S. court has ruled that the salvage company Odyssey Marine Exploration does not have to open its research files to the Spanish government. The company announced its discovery of 500,000 silver Spanish coins, “somewhere in international waters in the Atlantic Ocean,” last year.

  • Comments Off on Friday, March 14

Thursday, March 13
March 13, 2008

A study of mitochondrial DNA from North, Central, and South American Indians suggests that just six women who crossed into North America from Beringia some 20,000 years ago have a surviving legacy. 

In Ireland, a woman protesting the construction of the M3 motorway near the Hill of Tara is reportedly locked to a jack supporting a tunnel at the Rath Lugh promontory fort.  

A $285,000 grant has been awarded to The Hermitage, the Tennessee home of Andrew Jackson and his 150 slaves. Archaeologists will use the money to catalog the 800,000 artifacts left by the enslaved work force, and create an online database.  

The human bones uncovered in Tampa while digging a septic tank could be more than 1,000 years old.  

Mansur Sadjadi, director of excavations at Iran’s Burnt City, says that a 5,200-year-old bowl marks the beginning of animation. A series of images around the bowl depict a goat leaping to eat leaves from a tree branch when the bowl is spun. There’s a video clip of the action at the end of the article.  

Archaeologists from the Israel Antiquities Authority working with the Western Wall Heritage Foundation have been digging near the Temple Mount in Jerusalem for the past two years. Today they have announced that they have found a layer of artifacts from the end of the First Temple period sealed beneath a second-century A.D. Roman road.

  • Comments Off on Thursday, March 13




Advertisement


Advertisement

  • Subscribe to the Digital Edition