Archaeology Magazine Archive

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Archaeology Magazine News Archive
2008-2012


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Tuesday, January 3
January 3, 2012

Sediments from one of the reservoirs in Angkor’s water system suggest that there was a drop in water levels at the time the Khmer Empire collapsed. “Angkor can be an example of how technology isn’t always sufficient to prevent major collapse during times of severe instability,” said Mary Beth Day of the University of Cambridge.

Recent flooding in Thailand has damaged historic books in several libraries. German experts in book conservation and restoration are assisting Thai librarians and Buddhist monks with the monumental task of rescuing the damaged tomes. “We’re really very grateful for the many tips,” said Maha Srithon Samajaro.

An ancient stone platform on the Big Island of Hawaii that was damaged by last spring’s tsunami has been restored. Volunteers contributed 3,000 hours to the project.

An emergency landfill to take Rome’s garbage could be opened near Hadrian’s Villa, a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Be sure to watch the video for views of the villa and the dump site.

The Bureau of Land Management conducted an environmental assessment of a new route for a natural gas pipeline through Utah’s Nine Mile Canyon and found that it would not have a significant impact on archaeological sites. Comments on the proposal are now being accepted.

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Monday, January 2
January 2, 2012

Three sections of a mosaic floor were stolen from a Roman archaeological site in Spain’s Baños de Valderados. The site is locked during the winter, but no security personnel were on duty at the time of the theft.

Looters are stripping China’s historic tombs of their artifacts, often using bulldozers and dynamite to break open the buried chambers. The artifacts are then sold to international antiquities dealers. “Stolen cultural artifacts are usually first smuggled out through Hong Kong and Macao and then taken to Taiwan, Canada, America or European countries to be traded,” said Wei Yongshun, a senior investigator for the ministry of public security.

Excavations at the ancient city of Stratonikeia, which is located near Turkey’s Aegean coast, have revealed sections of the city’s walls, a street lined with columns, the bust of a king, and mosaics.

Archaeologists think the Neolithic buildings surrounded by a huge outer wall at the site at Ness of Brodgar may have been used for religious purposes at least 500 years before Stonehenge was built. The site is located on the Orkney Islands of northern Scotland. “At first we thought it was a settlement but the scale and complexity within the buildings makes you think along the lines of a temple precinct. It’s something you would associate with the classical world,” said project manager Nick Card.

Stone tools unearthed at the site of Roudias on the island of Cyprus suggest that hunters and gatherers  regularly visited the campsite for millennia.

The wreck of the USS Narcissus, a Civil War tugboat sitting on the bottom of Tampa Bay, will become an underwater archaeological preserve. All of the sailors on board the Narcissus were killed when it sank in 1866.

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