Nouvelles archéologiques



Chantiers, prospection et projets archéologiques
le 30 octobre 2009

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. [...]


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Chantiers, prospection et projets archéologiques
le 30 octobre 2009

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. [...]


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Chantiers, prospection et projets archéologiques
le 29 octobre 2009

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. [...]


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Chantiers, prospection et projets archéologiques
le 29 octobre 2009

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. [...]


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Chantiers, prospection et projets archéologiques
le 29 octobre 2009

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. [...]


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Chantiers, prospection et projets archéologiques
le 29 octobre 2009

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. [...]


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Chantiers, prospection et projets archéologiques
le 29 octobre 2009

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. [...]


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Science, recherche et technologie
le 29 octobre 2009

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. [...]


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Législation archéologique, procès légaux et activités criminelles
le 29 octobre 2009

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. [...]


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Patrimoine, préservation et conservation
le 28 octobre 2009

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. [...]


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