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Archaeology Magazine News Archive
2008-2012


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

Wednesday, August 27
by Jessica E. Saraceni
August 27, 2008

There are 345 registered historical monuments and archaeological sites, and several museums, within the areas of Georgia that have suffered heavy fighting and bombing by the Russians. “At the moment, there is no way to get to the key areas to assess the damage. It is not even safe for local residents. There is a real risk of unexploded mines and the armed forces say it will be two weeks before the territory is safe enough to enter,” said Maka Dvalishvili, director of the Georgian Arts and Cultural Centre.

An intact tomb from Peru’s Wari culture was discovered at Huaca Pucllana, in Lima. The tomb, which dates to 700 A.D., contained a female mummy and the remains of two other adults and a child.   This article on the find offers a little information about how the mummies were wrapped and the mask worn by the woman.   The Daily Mail from Britain has published fantastic photographs of the tomb and its contents.  

Archaeologists have uncovered a few artifacts on the shores of O’Reilly Island that could be from the Erebus and the Terror, two British ships that sank in the Arctic on the nineteenth-century expedition led by Sir John Franklin. “We do expect to find a reasonably well-protected, well-preserved hull,” said Parks Canada archaeologist Robert Grenier.  

Claims by Lee R. Berger that bones from Palau are “Hobbit-like” dwarfs have been refuted by American and Australian scientists, who say that the bones represent normal, modern hunters and gatherers. “He did not take the time to understand the area in which he was working – its entire history, not just the skeletal stuff,” anthropologist Greg C. Nelson of the University of Oregon said of Berger’s “rush to publish.”  

The Alborz Dam will soon inundate ancient cemeteries in the Savadkuh region of Iran. This article describes the skeletons found in an Iron Age burial ground in 2005.   

Looters found artifacts in western Turkey six years ago in an area outside of Sardis that archaeologists will now investigate. “We believe that there is an ancient Roman city hidden beneath the soil,” said Suleyman Cinar, mayor of the nearby village of Buyukhanli.  

Archaeologist Anne Corscadden Knox will travel from Ireland to lead an underwater investigation off Key Largo, Florida. The team will try to determine if a wreck is a paddle steamer that sank during the Civil War while carrying Union soldiers to New Orleans.   

The remains of 33 Australian Aborigines were reclaimed last month from the Smithsonian Institution, but Australian archaeologist Sally May says that many more bones are still unclaimed.  

What do you think? Museum curator Paul Jarman won a Hadrian look-alike-contest.

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