Fossil hunters in Ethiopia are excavating a mandible, or lower jaw, of Ardipithecus ramidus. A fairly complete skeleton of this individual, nicknamed Ardi, is 4.4-million-years-old. It lived well before and was much more primitive than the 3.2-million-year-old Lucy skeleton, of the species Australopithecus afarensis. Unveiling the Ardi remains this week, scientists said this was the earliest known skeleton of a potential human ancestor.
Excavating Ardi (Gallery via New York Times)
Archaeologists find rare 1,100 year-old tomb of female singer in Egypt’s Valley of the Kings
CAIRO — In a rare find, Egyptian and Swiss archaeologists have unearthed a roughly 1,100 year-old tomb of a female singer in the Valley of the Kings, an antiquities official said Sunday.
It is the only tomb of a woman not related to the ancient Egyptian royal families ever found in the Valley of the Kings, said Mansour Boraiq, the top government official for the Antiquities’ Ministry in the city of Luxor, The Valley of the Kings in Luxor is a major tourist attraction. In 1922, archaeologists there unearthed the gold funerary mask of Tutankhamun and other stunning items in the tomb of the king who ruled more than 3,000 years ago.
Boraiq told The Associated Press that the coffin of the female singer is remarkably intact.
He said that when the coffin is opened this week, archaeologists will likely find a mummy and a cartonnage mask molded to her face and made from layers of linen and plaster.
The singer’s name, Nehmes Bastet, means she was believed to be protected by the feline deity Bastet.
The tomb was found by accident, according to Elena Pauline-Grothe, field director for excavation at the Valley of the Kings with Switzerland’s University of Basel.
“We were not looking for new tombs. It was close to another tomb that was discovered 100 years ago,” Pauline-Grothe said.
Pauline-Grothe said the tomb was not originally built for the female singer, but was reused for her 400 years after the original one, based on artifacts found inside. Archaeologists do not know whom the tomb was originally intended for.
The coffin of the singer belonged to the daughter of a high priest during the 22nd Dynasty.
Archaeologists concluded from artifacts that she sang in Karnak Temple, one of the most famous and largest open-air sites from the Pharaonic era, according to evidence at the site.
At the time of her death, Egypt was ruled by Libyan kings, but the high priests who ruled Thebes, which is now within the city of Luxor, were independent. Their authority enabled them to use the royal cemetery for family members, according to Boraiq.
The unearthing marks the 64th tomb to be discovered in the Valley of the Kings.
Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
The European...

The European Archaeologist
Published by the European Association of Archaeologists, - TEA - The European Archaeologist is a great way to find out what is going on in European Archaeology. Lots of short articles discussing the cutting edge of research and work.
Tel Harmal: temple, palace and school

Tel Harmal: temple, palace and school
Chauvet Cave, France, featured in Werner Herzog’s Cave of...

Chauvet Cave, France, featured in Werner Herzog’s Cave of Forgotten Dreams
Stonehenge Precursor Found? Island Complex Predates Famous Site

On an island off Britain’s northern tip, new discoveries suggest a huge Stone Age ritual complex is older than Stonehenge.
Extreme Geology: The Giant’s Causeway, Ireland and Staffa,...

Giant Causeway. Ireland. By laurieciao

Staffa's columns. By piglicker

Staffa. Scotland. By Purplekitten
Extreme Geology: The Giant’s Causeway, Ireland and Staffa, Scotland
These amazing basalt columns cane be found on Staffa, Scotland, and Giant’s Causeway in Nothern Ireland. These geological structures formed from volcanic activity over 50 mya where the slow cooling of basalt creates the hexagonal columns you see today. The process which creates such stunning hexagonal columns is called “columnar jointing”; a process where the basalt rapidly cools from the outside towards the centre, causing it to contract and form these structures.
The “Republic of Tahrir”—as journalist Ashraf Khalil calls it in...

The “Republic of Tahrir”—as journalist Ashraf Khalil calls it in this first-person account—is now synonymous with a politics of spontaneity, youthfulness, and optimism. Yet for those who have long dreamed for the birth of liberal societies in the world’s least free region, the Tahrir moment has also been a source of anguish.
Did Zombies Roam Medieval Ireland?

Two early medieval skeletons were unearthed recently in Ireland with large stones wedged into their mouths — evidence, archaeologists say, that it was feared the individuals would rise from their graves like zombies.
Ancient Aliens wouldn't know Archaeology if it came up and slapped them with a pottery sherd.
Battle Creek museum gives back artifacts to Native Americans

“In the basement and back rooms of Kingman Museum, the remains of people from long ago wait to return home.
That’s the goal of the federal Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act, which became law in 1990. Since then, the museum has been working to return the remains of Native American people and artifacts back to the tribes from which they originated.
It can be a daunting task, correctly identifying and returning such materials for any institution; notices of the remains have to be sent to the relevant tribes and the National Park Service’s NAGPRA Program, which then publishes notices for Native American tribes to review to see if there are remains to be repatriated to them…”
"As a student of anthropology, I often wonder what future generations will think about us when they..."
- Duck
Al-Asmar Figurines. The Tell Asmar sculpture hoard is a...

Al-Asmar Figurines.
The Tell Asmar sculpture hoard is a collection of 12 human effigy statues, discovered at the Mesopotamian site of Tell Asmar. The hoard was discovered during Henri Frankfort’s Oriental Institute excavations in the 1930s. They were stacked in several layers within an 85x50 cm hole 1.25 meters (about 4 feet) below the floor of the structure known as the Square Temple.
The statues average about 42 centimeters in height. They are of men and women with large staring eyes, upturned faces, and clasped hands, dressed in the skirts of the Early Dynastic period of Mesopotamia. They are believed to represent gods and goddesses and their worshipers. The largest male figure is thought to represent the god Abu, based on symbols carved into the base.
Sidenote: I’m taking a class on this all semester… you’re going to see a lot the art i really like now.
Flintknapper replicates hundreds of Levallois artefacts

New published research from anthropologists at the University of Kent has scientifically supported for the first time the long held theory that early human ancestors across Africa, Western Asia and Europe engineered their stone tools.
For over a century, anthropologists have debated the significance of a group of stone age artefacts manufactured by at least three prehistoric hominin species, including the Neanderthals (Homo neanderthalensis). These artefacts, collectively known as ‘Levallois’, were manufactured across Europe, Western Asia and Africa as early as 300,000 years ago.
One man’s mission to save Kurdistan’s history Qadir Qachakh’s...

One man’s mission to save Kurdistan’s history
Qadir Qachakh’s museum displays his collection
Dressed in an immaculate traditional Peshmarga uniform, Qadir Qachakh walks confidently around his private museum that filled with archeological treasures from many Kurdish areas. As he describes the pieces, their ages and where they were found, his passion shines through. He said he visited tens of museums all over Europe and “none of the museums had more archeological pieces than mine.”
read the whole article: http://www.kurdishglobe.net/display-article.html?id=2A60BDA9C8E50ED74E610674DE952DC1
"Archaeology is a surpremely challenging, puzzle-solving activity."
"Archaeology is the science that proves you can’t keep a good man down.” — Anonymous"
"For me archaeology is not a source of illustrations for written texts, but an independent source of..."
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