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2008-2012


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

Tuesday, March 27
by Jessica E. Saraceni
March 27, 2012

An international team of geneticists compared DNA from modern cows with DNA extracted from the bones of domesticated cattle excavated from archaeological sites in Iran. The scientists concluded that all modern domesticated cows are descended from a single herd of aurochs that lived 10,500 years ago. “A small number of cattle progenitors is consistent with the restricted area for which archaeologists have evidence for early cattle domestication 10,500 years ago. This restricted area could be explained by the fact that cattle breeding, contrary to, for example, goat herding, would have been very difficult for mobile societies, and that only some of them were actually sedentary at that time in the Near East,” said Jean-Denis Vigne of the French National Center for Scientific Research.

After 30 years of restoration, the first floor of the Stoa of Attalos  will reopen at the Ancient Agora of Athens. The space will house 56 sculptures discovered during the Agora excavations.

Highway construction in central Greece has revealed one of the oldest sanctuaries dedicated to Asclepios, the god of healing, ever found. Dating to the fifth century B.C., the sanctuary was written about by the historian Strabon in the first century A.D. It was moved stone by stone out of the highway’s path.

Indiana University archaeologist Cheryl Munson would like to preserve the site of an early nineteenth-century iron foundry as a park, but a highway could be constructed nearby instead.

A bill that would reorganize the Transportation Enhancements Program, which provides funds for archaeology and environmental research projects associated with highway construction, has been passed by the U.S. Senate. Most of the money spent under the program had been used to create walking and biking trails, with archaeological projects receiving less than one percent of the total available funds.

John Jeffrey Santo has been sentenced to 366 days in prison and ordered to pay $7,346 in restitution to Virginia’s Petersburg National Battlefield, where he dug up more than 9,000 Civil War artifacts between 2006 and 2010. Hidden cameras at the park photographed Santo in the act of looting.

Archaeologists are looking for traces of Australia’s only known pirate in a limestone cave on one of the islands of the Recherche Archipelago. Black Jack Anderson was an early nineteenth-century American who robbed whaling ships that passed his island and kidnapped and killed local people.

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