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!

Wednesday, May 26
by Jessica E. Saraceni
May 26, 2010

Iraq’s Anticorruption Commission announced that it has caught a gang of antiquities thieves in a sting operation.

Eight-thousand-year-old rock art discovered in a cave in 2002 may offer insight into the rise of Egyptian civilization. “It seems that the paintings of the Cave of the Beasts pre-date the introduction of domesticated animals. That means they predate 6000 B.C.,” said Rudolph Kuper of the Heinrich Barth Institute.  

Divers have returned to the ruins of Cleopatra’s palace in the waters off the coast of Alexandria, Egypt. The so-called Royal Quarters, which included ports, temples, palaces, and military outposts, fell into the sea during earthquakes in the fourth and eighth centuries. “It’s as it was when it sank,” said Ashraf Abdel-Raouf of the Supreme Council of Antiquities.  

Here’s a photograph of the altar uncovered at a disputed hospital construction site in Ashkelon. “The discovery further corroborates the assertion that we are dealing with a pagan cemetery,” said Yigal Israel of the Israel Antiquities Authority.  

Tourists will soon be able to visit the underground areas of Rome’s Colosseum.  

Mesoamerican peoples varied their recipe of latex from rubber trees and the juice from morning-glory vines to produce rubber with different qualities for a variety of uses, such as shoes, balls, rubber bands, and adhesives, according to researchers from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.  

Here’s more information from Cyprus on the intact tomb excavated last week and the four painted sarcophagi found within it. “We think this is part of a larger cemetery or burial ground. This is a new area of discovery for us,” said Maria Hadjicosti of the Antiquities Department.  

And, in case you missed it when it was first announced, The Independent has an article on Easter Island’s network of roads and moai. “Ever since Heyerdhal, it has been assumed that the roads were used for transportation and little else. But what we know now is that the roads very much had a ceremonial function and the quarry was where the islanders would go because it was a sacred center,” said Sue Hamilton of University College London.  

Bannerman’s Castle was built on an island in the Hudson River in the early years of the twentieth century to store the munitions that Francis Bannerman VI sold in his war relic store in Manhattan. Modeled after a Scottish castle, the burned-out shell is now in danger of collapsing while preservationists try to raise the money to save it. “I just get antsy because it can come down at any time,” said Neil Caplan, head of the Bannerman Castle Trust.  

How much is Stonehenge worth?  

Chimp populations are declining due to deforestation and the bush meat trade, just as human scientists are learning about their use of tools in the past and present. “Whole groups of chimpanzees have already been exterminated, and with them, their technological heritage,” wrote William McGrew of the University of Cambridge in Science.

Comments posted here do not represent the views or policies of the Archaeological Institute of America.

Comments are closed.




Advertisement


Advertisement