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Archaeology Magazine News Archive
2008-2012


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Tuesday, March 13
March 13, 2012

Construction work was prevented in Vancouver when protesters from the Musqueam Indian Band kept the developers off a lot that they say could be an ancient burial ground.

Light detection and ranging, or LiDAR, is a high-tech tool scientists are using to map archaeological sites and how they change over time. “LiDAR technology (helps) map not only ancient architecture, but the underlying landscape in a more cost-effective manner than would a traditional archaeological survey,” wrote Chris Fisher, who has used LiDAR technology in Western Mexico, where he has mapped the Purepecha city of Sacapu Angamuco.

Archaeologists have used ground-penetrating radar and a magnetometer to map a Viking settlement in eastern Norway. “There is no doubt that we have encountered a market town-like structure from the Viking age with houses and streets,” said Knut Paashe of the Norwegian Institute for Cultural Heritage Research.

Tomorrow morning, Jerusalem District Court Judge Aharon Farkash will rule in the trial of Oded Golan, who was indicted on charges of forgery, fraud, and deception in 2004 related to the much hyped “James Ossuary.” Nearly 140 witnesses testified in his trial, but experts could not agree on the origins of the bone box.

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Monday, March 12
March 12, 2012

Ten men were buried alive while they were illegally digging for artifacts in a village located north of Luxor, Egypt. Two men who survived the collapse of the hole have been arrested.

Spain will return eight artifacts to Egypt that had been looted in 1999, from the tomb of the sixth-dynasty official Eimb Hur in Saqqara. Police in Barcelona seized the objects from suspected smugglers in September 2010.

American archaeologists Elizabeth Stone and Paul Zimansky of Stony Brook University returned to southern Iraq for the first time since the 1990 Gulf War. They started excavating Tell Sakhariya, where they unearthed a herders’ encampment dating to 1800 B.C., human burials, a platform, and parts of inscribed bricks. “It’s very tentative, but the site may be Ga’esh, a place where Ur’s kings went every year for a festival renewing their rulership,” said Stone.

Five sets of human remains found in a mass grave at Duffy’s Cut, located near Philadelphia, were reburied last week. The four men and one woman were just a few of the 57 Irish railroad workers who died shortly after their arrival in America. It was long thought that the immigrants died of cholera, but some of the remains show signs of violence. “They’ll get a real burial that they didn’t have in 1832, that’s for sure,” said historian Bill Watson.

In Japan, clay “haniwa” figures are thought to have been made for ritual use and then buried with the dead, beginning in the fifth century. Archaeologists have discovered fragments of early haniwa figures depicting wrestlers, warriors, a seated person, and horses in the Ishiya burial mound, which is located on Honshu Island, along the coast of the Sea of Japan.

In Brooklyn, New York, members of the Friends and Residents of Greater Gowanus are working with archaeologists to find the burial place of more than 200 Revolutionary War soldiers who were killed during the Battle of Long Island in 1776. The activists are concerned that the cleanup of the canal could turn up the grave. “We have to do a thorough search of British military records,” said archaeologist Chris Ricciari.

Skeletal remains of 167 people have been recovered from a cave in southern Mexico. The bones could date to the eighth century.

A popular Turkish television show has been accused of damaging an archaeological site within Yarimburgaz Cave by the Culture and Tourism Ministry. Yarimburgaz Cave, which is located near Istanbul, contains the earliest traces of human habitation in Turkey. The producers of the show had reportedly not filed the necessary permits.

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