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NORTH KOREA| DPRK unearths 2000 year old tomb
Archaeologists in the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK) recently unearthed a tomb that dates back more than 2000 years, the official Rodong Sinmun daily announced Friday. The tomb, discovered in South Phyongan province, had remained intact, the report said. A wooden coffin and dozens of bronze and iron wares had been unearthed from the 1.5-meter-deep tomb, it continued. The discovery showed that the smelting and founding techniques of ancient Korea had reached a sophisticated level at that time, the newspaper concluded. [...]
SYRIA| Archaeologists unearthed a residential place back to the Greek era
Archaeologists uncovered ancient findings dating back to the Greek era during excavations at Sheikh Saad site in Daraa, southern Syria. The excavations unearthed a residential place consisting of four rooms, a warehouse and an ancient drainage channel with some parts covered by flagstones. ''15 small-sized coins, which were not identified for being oxidized, were also discovered, and cleaning is underway to define the era that they belong to,'' Director of Daraa Ruins Department Hussein Mashhadawi said. He added that the archaeological mission also discovered nice-shaped and skillfully-made earthenware pieces at the same site. Two coins belonging to the Roman era that date back to 1255 C.E., and another one dating back to the same era were also discovered at Tal al-Ashari site, Mashhadawi said. [...]
EGYPT| Austrian archaeologists make Babylonian find in Egypt
Austrian archaeologists have found a Babylonian seal in Egypt that confirms contact between the Babylonians and the Hyksos during the second millennium B.C. Irene Forstner-Müller, the head of the Austrian Archaeological Institute’s (ÖAI) branch office in Cairo, said today (Thurs) the find had occurred at the site of the ancient town of Avaris near what is today the city of Tell el-Dab’a in the eastern Nile delta. The Hyksos conquered Egypt and reigned there from 1640 to 1530 B.C. She said a recently-discovered cuneiform tablet had led archaeologists to suspect there had been contact between the Babylonians and the Hyksos. Forstner-Müller added that Manfred Bietak had begun archaeological research on the period of Hyksos dominance at the remains of a Hyksos palace at Avaris in 1966. [...]
MEXICO| Archaeologists find skeletons at Mexico ex-convent
A street repaving project in the southern colonial Mexican city of Oaxaca has turned up 10 skeletons and the foundations of a 15th-century convent. Archaeologists have long suspected that the street ran over part of the Convent of San Pablo. Many church properties in Mexico were broken up or built over in the 1860s. Archaeologist Enrique Fernandez said Wednesday that researchers monitoring the repaving project found the 10 skeletal remains beneath what had once probably been chapels. Fernandez said the remains from the early 1600s may belong to lay workers who wanted to be buried in the convent floors. The site will probably be paved over again once research is finished. [...]
NORWAY| Tree "mummies" found, traced back to Viking era
Dated to the early 1200s, the 40 dead Scotch pines were found scattered among living trees in what was once a dense forest that supplied wood for medieval boats and churches. The trees appear to have died from natural causes after living out their several-hundred-year life spans. But somehow the dead trees "survived"—they apparently have never rotted. The mummified trees are different from petrified wood, a kind of fossil created when wood is replaced with minerals over thousands of years. The find astounded researchers, since most dead trees decay as they are eaten by tiny organisms, said research leader Terje Thun, a biologist at the Norwegian University of Science and Technology in Trondheim. [...]
SWEDEN| Unique Stone Age burial items unearthed in central Sweden
Swedish archaeologists are marveling over a collection of 9,000 year old artifacts recently uncovered at an excavation site central Sweden. Parts of a bow, a paddle, and the wooden shaft of an axe are among the discoveries recently unearthed from the Stone Age settlement Kanaljorden outside of Motala, according to local media reports. “Totally unbelievable,” project leader Fredrik Hallgren with the Stiftelsen Kulturmiljövård Mälardalen (‘Cultural Preservation Society of Mälardalen’) told the local newspaper Motala & Vadstena Tidning. All of the artifacts except for the axe blade are made of wood. The objects have been preserved for thousands of years because a layer of peat covered the mud in which they were found. The discovery is unique for central Sweden, and the bow is the first of its kind ever discovered in Sweden. [...]
SPAIN| Spain starts exhuming purported Garcia Lorca grave
Forensic experts on Wednesday began exhuming a mass unmarked grave that could hold the remains of the acclaimed poet Federico Garcia Lorca, in a milestone in Spain's drive to address the legacy of its 1936-39 civil war. Working under a tent-like structure, the team started preliminary work staking out and cleaning surface soil at the site in southern Spain in preparation for digging in earnest, said Sara Gil, an archaeologist who is a member of the team. "The excavation work has begun. I cannot say anything else," Gil told reporters. Maribel Brenes, president of a local association of relatives of war-time missing, said the exhumation will get under way in earnest later in the week. It is not clear if the writer's remains will ever be identified, however, because his family opposes the exhumation. The goal of the digging is to find and identify the remains of several men who, like Garcia Lorca, were executed in the opening days of the civil war and are believed to be buried along with him in the same grave. [...]
IRELAND| Our forebears knew their trees from their woods
Archaeological digs turn up exciting artefacts – jewellery, utensils and buildings that our ancestors left behind as clues to how they lived and died thousands of years ago. But as well as the man-made items, there’s another vast bank of information to be plundered: the record that nature left behind. If you look closely, pollen, charcoal and preserved wood found at or near excavation sites can tell us how humans understood and interacted with their environment, particularly with the woodlands on which many relied for building materials and fuel.“They really knew their trees,” says archaeologist Ellen OCarroll, who is looking at woodland use in the Midlands going as far back as the Stone Age. “Trees were part of their life and folklore and history, and they were used to make artefacts. It’s hard for us now to appreciate just how important they were.” To find out more about how humans used the woodlands around them, ocarroll is doing a PhD on the environmental context of 86 archaeological excavations along the N6 route between Kinnegad and Athlone. [...]
INDIA| Four arrested with stolen idols
Police have arrested four persons in Kakarbhitta with stolen idols of Buddha while they were being smuggled to India. A police team led by inspector Lalgovinda Shrestha arrested Dava Lama Gurung of Garma-7, Solukhumbu, Mukti Manav Moktan of Lakhanpur-7, Ramechhap, Karnadhwaj Limbu of Phakumba-6, Taplejung, and Devi Prasad Acharya of Duwagadhi-4, Jhapa from Assam Hotel in Kakarbhitta with the idols. The metal idols will be sent to the Department of Archaeology for investigation. [...]
EGYPT| Right to All Heritages
Just like cathedrals are for Catholics, synagogues are proud monuments of Jewish history, our legacy in architecture passed through generations. But what should be done with old synagogues where no Jews longer live, the living conditions—inhabited by non-Jews—are poor, and money is being spent to rebuild synagogues that are never used? This problem sprang up recently in Cairo, where the famed Ben Maimon synagogue in the old Jews’ Quarter, which is no longer inhabited by Jews, is under rehabilitation to restore its former glory. The synagogue is named for the great Jewish thinker and doctor Maimonides. Dr. Zahi Hawass, the Secretary General of the Egyptian Supreme Council of the Antiquities—the man wearing the Indiana Jones-style hat in Egyptian documentaries, talking about tomb finds and mummies—maintains, “Jewish sites are an important part of our heritage.” But whose heritage does the synagogue belong to—that of the Egyptians or Jews of today, or the Egyptian Jews of yesterday? Under clear modern law, the synagogue is on Egyptian land. [...]
SYRIA| Archaeological Findings: International Museums Showcase Euphrates Valley Exhibits
Middle Euphrates valley is one of the richest archaeological sites in Syria, well-known for its archaeological findings reflecting the different historical ages and the thousand years of architectural progress passed over the area. The region has become the destination of foreign travellers and amateur archaeologists since the 18th century, said Yasser Shuhan Director of Antiquities and Museums in Deir Ezzor. French, German and American archaeological missions have long started to arrive in the region to survey archaeological sites and to draw maps and charts of the region. Excavation missions working at the site uncovered thousands of archaeological findings of great historical, scientific and artistic significance that is exhibited at the most famous museums worldwide. The painting of Zimri-Lim, King of Mari that was found on the southern hallway in the 106 courtyard of the Royal Palace is showcased at Louvre Museum. [...]
NIGERIA| ‘Adapt or perish’
Recent demolition of pieces of National Monuments at National Museum Benin as well as lingering inadequate funding of various art/culture institutions by successive governments are glaring proofs of the unsettling disconnect between society and the invaluable place of archaeology. But, in a candid manner, archaeologists have been told that the sources of many drawbacks they face are closer to home. Speaking at an ongoing international seminar in Jos, Plateau State, Dr. Ogban Ogban-Iyam of the Department of Political Science, University of Nigeria said the fortunes of archaeologists will continue to dwindle until these professionals realized the need to be captains of their ship. In his keynote address, titled “Politics and Archaeology: The relationship, the dynamics and implication for African Archaeologists,” delivered at the opening of a five-day brainstorm by members of the West African Archaeological Association (WAAA), Ogban-Iyam submitted: “Archaeology is still a largely misunderstood subject in West Africa” and that “the poor image of Archaeology reflects a wide communication gap.” [...]
UNITED STATES| Lake County investigates human remains found at Big Arm
Lake County officials say human remains were found in Big Arm last week and have been taken to the state crime lab in Missoula for identification and to determine the cause of death. Sheriff's Lt. Mike Sergeant says the remains were found last Thursday. Experts from the state crime lab and the University of Montana archaeology department helped process the scene. [...]
SYRIA| Burial Jars Dating Back to Third Century Found in Palmyra
The Syrian-Japanese Archaeological Expedition uncovered 13 individual graves during their work at the private burial chamber number 129 located near the Northern defensive wall of the ancient city of Palmyra. The graves were used to bury children that apparently were less than two years old when they died. Some of the graves are simple holes in the grounds containing a coffin, in addition to two graves consisting of medium-sized clay jars containing skeletons of children that are estimated to have been only a few months old when they died. These graves date back to the third century AD, during the heyday of the Palmyrene kingdom. This discovery was made as the Syrian-Japanese Archaeological Expedition concluded work at the site. [...]
EGYPT| MET agrees to return Pharoanic relic to Egypt
Egyptian authorities say New York's Metropolitan Museum of Art has agreed to return an ancient Pharoanic relic to its homeland. According to Egypt's Supreme Council of Antiquities, the red granite shrine piece was purchased from a New York antiquities collector last October to be returned. The piece belongs to the naos honoring the 12th Dynasty King Amenemhat I, who ruled 4,000 years ago, which is now in the Ptah temple of Karnak in Luxor, Artdaily reported. Head of Egypt's Supreme Council of Antiquities, Zahi Hawass, referred to the act as a "great deed," saying that it was the first time a museum bought an item only to return it.[...]
UNITED STATES| Vermont scores high in stewardship ranking
Vermont has been named one of the best-rated places in the world, and No. 1 in the United States, for stewardship and authenticity by the National Geographic Society. The sixth annual "Survey of Destination Stewardship," conducted by National Geographic Society's Center for Sustainable Destinations, ranked Vermont fifth in the world and first in the United States. The rankings are published in the November/December issue of National Geographic Traveler magazine. The society surveyed 437 panelists in sustainable tourism and destination quality, who looked at six criteria including environmental and ecological quality, social and cultural integrity, condition of historic buildings and archaeological sites, aesthetic appeal, quality of tourism management and outlook for the future. [...]
UNITED STATES| BU Evolutionary Studies Seminar: Paleoanthropology and Human Evolution
The fall 2009 Evolutionary Studies seminar series continues this Friday, October 30, at 4:00 PM in LH-2. BU paleoanthropologist Rolf Quam will present "Recent Discoveries in the Sierra de Atapuerca, Spain". A site in this mountain range known as the Sima de los Huesos (the "Pit of the Bones") is rich with Homo heidelbergensis fossils, providing many clues to early human evolution. The seminar will be followed by food and continued discussion. [...]
UNITED KINGDOM| Archaeology course unlocks "silent history" of the slave trade in West Africa
When Philippa Baker-Rabe says a historical archaeology class changed her life, she's not exaggerating. "I took it on a whim my sophomore year and ended up loving it," recalled Baker-Rabe. "It was an 8 a.m. class, but it ended up being my favorite. I realized this is what I want to do forever." Taught by assistant professor of anthropology J. Cameron Monroe, the class opened a door that led Baker-Rabe to West Africa, where she spent seven weeks this past summer as part of UCSC's first undergraduate archaeological expedition to Benin. Under Monroe's leadership, Baker-Rabe and seven other undergraduates spent nearly two months unearthing beads, bits of pottery, and other artifacts that yield clues to the everyday lives of Africans during the 18th and 19th centuries. [...]
UNITED STATES| Field Class Takes Archaeology Students to Arizona
If you thought digging in the dirt stopped being a suitable summer activity in sixth grade, think again. For four weeks this July, seven UVM undergrads and two teaching assistants joined Scott Van Keuren, assistant professor of anthropology, on an excavation at Fourmile Ruin, the largest Ancestral Pueblo, or Anasazi village, in Eastern Arizona. The archeological site is an important one for Van Keuren's research, which focuses on a shift in pottery styles that took place around 1325. "Potters in this area begin to reorganize the way that they painted bowls," he explains. "These are really gorgeous vessels that are red and black and white. And in the 1320s, for whatever reason... [...]
UNITED STATES| Dig up family fun at the Clay Center's Archaeology Day
Families will have the chance to join a real-life Indiana Jones adventure with the Clay Center's new Archaeology Day family fun day from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Nov. 7. Guests can meet an archaeologist, create "artifacts," hear stories and more. Throughout the day, explore the more than 200 rare artifacts in the exhibit "Lost Kingdoms of the Nile: Nubian Treasures from the Museum of Fine Arts Boston." In Exploration Station, kids can write their names in hieroglyph, check out models of a prehistoric Nubian hut and irrigation system and more. Also premiering Nov. 7 is the all-new giant screen film "Mummies: Secrets of the Pharaohs [...]
UNITED KINGDOM| Oxford University’s Ashmolean Reopens After $100 Million Revamp
The Ashmolean, Oxford University’s 326-year-old museum of art and archaeology, reopens its doors on Nov. 7 after a 61 million pound ($100 million) overhaul. The redevelopment, put on show to reporters today, was led by Rick Mather Architects, which modernized London’s Wallace Collection. The project will double the display areas of Britain’s oldest public museum. There will be 39 new galleries, four exhibition spaces, new education and conservation sections, and the rooftop Ashmolean Dining Room. The museum’s collections are used by students of art history, history, archaeology, numismatics, and Oriental studies. “For generations, the Ashmolean has provided an outstanding resource for teachers, students and researchers -- as well as a remarkable treasure trove and source of inspiration for visitors of all ages,” Oxford Vice-Chancellor Andrew Hamilton said in a news release. With the new extensions, he said, “the special role of the Ashmolean has been secured for generations to come.” Key to the project was funding from both public and private sources. [...]
UNITED KINGDOM| New battle over Bosworth's site
It is more than 500 years since the Battle of Bosworth saw the death of Richard III and ushered in the Tudor dynasty. Since then scholars have argued over the precise location of the battle with several different locations given serious consideration. Now a team of historians and archaeologists says it has found the site - and it is not where everyone thought it was. It is one of Shakespeare's most memorable scenes. The hunchback Richard III, thrown from his horse and maddened with blood lust, offers up his kingdom in exchange for a replacement steed. Today the spot where he is supposed to have met his end - a victim of treachery rather than military genius - is marked by a roughly-cut stone memorial in a quiet grove. The plaque upon it reads simply: "Richard, the last Plantagenet King of England, was slain here 22nd August, 1485." Except that he was not. According to a team of battlefield experts and historians the location of the battlefield was two miles to the south and west. [...]
MONTENEGRO| British holidaymaker discovers lost underwater 'city'
A British holidaymaker has uncovered what is believed to be a lost, ancient temple while snorkelling in the Mediterranean. Michael Le Quesne, 16, was swimming off a popular beach in Montenegro with his parents and his ten-year-old sister Teodora when he spotted an odd looking 'stone' at a depth of around two metres. It turned out to be a large, submerged building which may have been the centrepiece of an important Greek or Roman trading post, swallowed up by the sea during a massive earthquake. A British team of experts led by Dr Lucy Blue, presenter of BBC Two show Oceans, is to investigate the significant find in this largely unexplored corner of south east Europe. Dr Blue said that if the discovery is confirmed to be an underwater temple it would “put Montenegro on the map”. She added: “Montenegro is largely an undiscovered underwater world.” The discovery was made while Charles and Vera Le Quesne and their two children, from Princes Risborough, Bucks, was on a trip to their holiday home in the tiny Balkan country last month.[...]
AZERBAIJAN| Archaeological evidence in Shamkir to be known for entire world
The Institute of Archaeology & Ethnography of the National Academy of Sciences of Azerbaijan (AMEA) and the Public Association of Regional Development have presented their joint project - a scientific & educational website about archaeology of Shamkir. AMEA president Makhmud Kerimov says that creation of the website about Shamkir archaeology is of great significance from angle of propaganda of ancient history and rich cultural legacy of Azerbaijani people. “The website will allow highlighting information about new archeological informing the world public of archaeological finds in Shamkir,” Kerimov said. The website (www.shamkir-archeo.az) operating in three languages (Azeri, Russian and English) presents materials about archaeological digs on the territory of Shamkir and their results. [...]
UNITED KINGDOM| Ancient treasure remains hidden
The city is a treasure trove for ancient artefacts, but they cannot be showcased here. Due to the rate of development, Milton Keynes is one of the best excavated places in the country. Last year alone, 18 digs took place. But with no archaeological museum, most items go to Bucks County Museum in Aylesbury, or into storage. Only some can be shown at Milton Keynes Museum, as it is only accredited for more recent social history. The issue was raised at an inquest last week, when Coroner Rodney Corner declared a Roman ring and spoon treasure. Metal detectorist Geoffrey Bonner from Newport Pagnell found the objects at a Roman tip on the town’s border with Bedfordshire. Coroner Corner adjourned another inquest into a Saxon silver pendant necklace and ring until more object comes forward. They were discovered during an excavation of a 7th century cemetery
near the Radcliffe School in Wolverton, where 81 bodies were found. During the inquest, Coroner Corner asked where the artefacts will end up. Ros Tyrrell, Finds Liaison Officer at Bucks County Council, replied
that a lack of staff and facilities means they will probably not be
shown in Milton Keynes. [...]
UNITED STATES| Archaeology program set for Oct. 31
The Orange County Archeology Symposium will be held from 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Saturday at Valley Central School on Route 17K. At 10 a.m., Evan Galbraith of Montgomery will speak of his design for the proposed Peale Museum of Discovery at the 1801 site of the Montgomery excavation of two complete mastodon skeletons by Charles Wilson Peale. Another driving force behind the proposed Peale Museum, historian Joseph Devine of Montgomery will talk about the Peale mastodons and about other mastodon discoveries in Orange County. Professor Barry Kass of SUNY Orange will speak at 1 p.m. about another Orange County treasure, the Dutchess Quarry Caves of Goshen. These rock shelters have yielded the oldest evidence of ancient man in the Northeast, approximately 12,500 years old. In the spirit of the Hudson-Fulton-Champlain Quadricentennial, Warwick historian Richard Hull, a professor at NYU, will give a historical account of the customs and habits of the Lenape Indians circa 1609 framed in a fictional story of a Henry Hudson member's explorations. Filmmaker and writer Robert Spiegelman, a professor at York College, will present «On Fateful Waters: Where New Worlds Meet Old Ambitions.» [...]
KOREA| Archaeologists find East Asia's oldest human relics
North Korean archaeologists have claimed to find what appears to be the oldest relics of a Homo Sapiens in East Asia. Scientists found the relics at the Chonbadae limestone cave in Hwanghae-bukdo province of North Hwanghae, Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) reported. During excavation, the scientists found seven fragments of bones that used to belong to five different human species. They found stone tools including cutters, choppers, scrapers and prods of the Paleolithic era. Experts from the Kim Il Sung University said the Hwangdu man lived 60,000 to 40,000 years ago. The cave is not far from the Black Anvil Paleolithic site, the oldest architectural monument on Korean Peninsula. [...]













