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!

Thursday, May 17
by Jessica E. Saraceni
May 17, 2012

The copper shell of a nineteenth-century wooden ship has been found in the Gulf of Mexico by scientists from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. The wreck, which sits under 4,000 feet of water, was first noticed during a sonar survey conducted by an oil company. A closer look with a remotely operated vehicle spotted a ceramic plate, glass bottles, and a rare ship’s stove.

Iraq’s oil ministry has started drilling in an unexcavated area of Babylon in order to extend a pipeline through the site, according to Qais Rashid, head of the Supreme Board of Antiquities and Heritage. UNESCO has not listed Babylon as a World Heritage site, saying that it had been badly managed under Saddam Hussein’s regime. Since then, the construction of a temporary U.S. military base with trenches and pits has also caused damage, notably to the Ishtar Gate and Processional Way.

Wendy van Duivenvoorde of Flinders University traveled to Madagascar in order to examine and record forgotten inscriptions left behind by seventeenth-century Dutch sailors. The Bay of Antongil, on the northeast corner of Madagascar, was known as a place on the route to South East Asia where ships could replenish their fresh water supplies and drop anchor to ride out a storm or repair a ship. “They started using the beach as a communications area by inscribing messages on the rock faces and frequently leaving letters for other ships to pick up. Basically it was like an early postal system,” she said.

A gold Sicán funeral mask was sold at Sotheby’s last week. According to the auction catalog, it had been in a private collection for more than 40 years. In Peru, Carlos Elera, the director of the Sicán Museum, responded, “The mask was looted by grave robbers from the area over 40 years ago. They must investigate how it left the country.”

Young Afghan students are learning stone carving in a man-made cave complex in the Bamiyan Valley. In 2001, the Taliban destroyed two colossal Buddha statues that stood in specially carved niches there. The week-long workshop encouraged the students to work with what they have to keep the tradition of stone carving alive. “If you want to destroy a people, you first destroy their heritage and history,” said Ismael Wahidi, an archaeology student at Bamiyan University and a workshop participant.

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

Comments are closed.




Advertisement


Advertisement