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Civil War fort at Jamestown is dug up to get at 1607 site

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Civil War fort at Jamestown is dug up to get at 1607 site:

Scott Neville/FOR THE WASHINTON POST - William Kelso, chief archaeologist for Jamestown Rediscovery, and his colleagues have recovered 1.4 million artifacts from James Fort.

By W. Barksdale Maynard, Published: May 7

“Since the sensational 1994 discovery of James Fort, the first permanent English settlement in the New World, excavations have revealed palisade walls and numerous buildings, along with remarkable clues about the Anglo-American culture that started with the landing of colonists on Virginia’s Jamestown Island in 1607.

But because much of the original fort is buried underneath a Confederate earthwork called Fort Pocahontas, these discoveries forced a painful historical and archaeological trade-off. To reveal James Fort, nearly half of Fort Pocahontas has been removed. “

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Inside D.C.’s Embassies

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Inside D.C.’s Embassies:

Many of Washington D.C.’s embassies opened their doors to the public recently as part of the Passport DC Around the World Embassy Tour. The Washington Post’s Mark S. Luckie documented the rare peek inside with the mobile photo application Instagram.

Lima's Sacred, Pre-Inca 'Huacas' Fall Prey to Growth

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Lima's Sacred, Pre-Inca 'Huacas' Fall Prey to Growth:

cennoreth:

archaeologicalnews:

On a street corner, under a garbage dump, at a construction site — pre-Inca archeological sites abound in Lima, where the ruins of hundreds of sacred places, or “huacas”, are at the mercy of urban growth and public indifference.

In the middle of the Miraflores residential district, one of Lima’s best restaurants opens onto the terrace of an ancient pyramid, offering fine food in a 1,500 year-old setting bathed in artificial lighting.

The Huaca Pucllana, the city’s archeological star, has been impeccably preserved thanks to a partnership with the restaurant, but the rare public-private initiative is an exception to the rule.

About three kilometers (two miles) away, in the densely populated Chorrillos neighborhood, a sign marks the existence of an “intangible archeological zone”. Its base is heaped with garbage. A small Catholic shrine sits in the middle of the huaca, built “thanks to the patronage” of the local mayor, as another sign says.

 Read more.

The Single Theory That Could Explain Emergence, Organisation And The Origin of Life

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The Single Theory That Could Explain Emergence, Organisation And The Origin of Life:

deconversionmovement:

Biochemists have long imagined that autocatalytic sets can explain the origin of life. Now a new mathematical approach to these sets has even broader implications.

One of the most puzzling questions about the origin of life is how the rich chemical landscape that makes life possible came into existence. 

This landscape would have consisted among other things of amino acids, proteins and complex RNA molecules. What’s more, these molecules must have been part of a rich network of interrelated chemical reactions which generated them in a reliable way.

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allmesopotamia: The design shows the evolution of the cuneiform...

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allmesopotamia:

The design shows the evolution of the cuneiform sign for barley, še (pronounced she, as in shed). The first sign is a pictograph from approximately 3000 BCE. The next sign is more abstract and has been rotated 90°. It dates from about 2500 BCE. The last sign is Late Assyrian from about 650 BCE. Here the sign has been simplified and rotated an additional 45°

Archaeological News: Glastonbury Abbey excavations reveal Saxon glass industry

joelwh: Zhang Kechun

Chinese Archaeologists to Begin Excavation in Kenya

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Chinese Archaeologists to Begin Excavation in Kenya:

archaeologicalnews:

MOMBASA, Kenya, May 8 –

The second round of the historical underwater ship excavation in a $3.6 million partnership project in the Coastal region of Kenya is set to commence in November with the arrival of Chinese archaeologists in the country.

A 13-member delegation has been in the country since last month to conduct surveillance over the expected archaeological sites in Mombasa and Malindi-Mambrui/Ngomeni area, according to the National Museums of Kenya (NMK) Assistant Director of Coastal region Athman Hussein.

Hussein told journalists here on Tuesday that a team of 80 people will be around to ensure the historical event is filmed and transmitted to the whole world as a way to help market Kenya as an underwater cultural heritage hub.

The Mambrui wreck, according to Athman, is a local ship believed to be between 150-200 years old, while the Mombasa channel has two wreckages, both assumed to have been ships from the Portuguese which sunk in the 17th century and are near Fort Jesus.

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aboutegypt: Louvre - Masque funéraire (by maRyemaRye)

ajal: One of a pair of pendants depicting the “Dragon Master”...

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ajal:

One of a pair of pendants depicting the “Dragon Master” (Tillya Tepe, Tomb II), 1st century BCE - 1st century CE . Gold, turquoise, garnet, lapis lazuli, carnelian and pearl.

National Museum of Afghanistan © Thierry Ollivier / Musée Guimet

6,000-year-old Settlement Poses Tsunami Mystery

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6,000-year-old Settlement Poses Tsunami Mystery:

archaeologicalnews:

Archaeologists have uncovered evidence of pre-farming people living in the Burren more than 6,000 years ago — one of the oldest habitations ever unearthed in Ireland.

Radiocarbon dating of a shellfish midden on Fanore Beach in north Clare have revealed it to be at least 6,000 years old — hundreds of years older than the nearby Poulnabrone dolmen.

The midden — a cooking area where nomad hunter-gatherers boiled or roasted shellfish — contained Stone Age implements, including two axes and a number of smaller stone tools.

Excavation of the site revealed a mysterious black layer of organic material, which archeologists believe may be the results of a Stone Age tsunami which hit the Clare coast, possibly wiping out the people who used the midden.

The midden was discovered by local woman Elaine O’Malley in 2009 and a major excavation of the site is being led by Michael Lynch, field monument adviser for Co Clare.

“This is the oldest settlement in Clare,” said Mr Lynch. “We have always thought hunter-gatherers existed in Clare but this is the first real evidence of that.

“These people were pre-farming. Farming would have been introduced a few generations later and these farmers built monuments like the dolmen.

“These people would have come to certain places at certain times of the year. Obviously they came here to eat shellfish, but possibly they had another place beside a river nearby for when they wanted to catch salmon and trout, and at other times they would have collected things like hazel nuts.

“We know that they were cooking and eating shellfish here, but we don’t know yet exactly what method they were using to cook it. So hopefully that is one of the things we can uncover in the weeks ahead.”

The archaeologists are also hoping to establish the make-up of a mysterious substance found during the excavation.

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allmesopotamia: Votive relief of Dudu, priest of Ningirsu, in...

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allmesopotamia:

Votive relief of Dudu, priest of Ningirsu, in the days of King Entemena of Lagash. Oil shale, ca. 2400 BCE.

Found in Telloh, ancient city of Girsu. A bas-relief.

centuriespast: Head of the BuddhaARTIST:Artist...

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centuriespast:

Head of the Buddha
ARTIST:Artist Unknown
DATE:570-577
MEDIUM:Black limestone

This large head of the Buddha most likely comes from the wall of a cave temple. The idea of carving temples and monastic complexes into living rock comes from India, but it became a favorite type of religious building in China as well. Buddhist cave sanctuaries at Tun-huang, Yun-kang, Lung-men and T’ien-lung-shan are famous for their associated sculpture. Often the back wall of a cave chapel was devoted to a large Buddha with flanking attendants. Carved during the Northern Ch’i dynasty (570-577) in a black limestone native to northern Honan, it is likely that this finely modeled head came from a rock temple in that region.

The Minneapolis Institute of Arts

ziggurating: Dholavira, India: A magnificent reminder of ancient...

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ziggurating:

Dholavira, India: A magnificent reminder of ancient civilisation

The Dholaviran people knew how to conserve water: tapping rain and perennial streams in great reservoirs, laying an underground sewerage system. In fact, Dholavira’s system of stone-faced channels and reservoirs — a must in the arid region — is the oldest in the world and used to store and distribute fresh rainwater or river water round the year.

Their society was stratified into three distinct classes of rulers, overseers and workers with their separate living and working areas, as is evident from the way the city is laid out, with a citadel, a walled middle town and a peripheral area probably for menuals.

Source

kilsoquah: Mayan astronomical charts found in Guatemalan jungle...

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kilsoquah:

Mayan astronomical charts found in Guatemalan jungle are oldest known

Paintings of the Mayan king and astronomical hieroglyphs unearthed in a room buried under a collapsed building

“Contrary to some theories, there was no sign that the Mayan calendar ended abruptly in 2012.”


infoneer-pulse: Unknown language found stamped in ancient clay...

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infoneer-pulse:

Unknown language found stamped in ancient clay tablet

In deciphering the tablet seen above, John MacGinnis of the University of Cambridge found that many of the names on the list are not from any currently known ancient language. “One or two are actually Assyrian and a few more may belong to other known languages of the period, such as Luwian or Hurrian,” he says, “but the great majority belong to a previously unidentified language.”

» via New Scientist

National Geographic Reports: Unprecedented Maya Mural Found, Contradicts 2012 "Doomsday" Myth

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National Geographic Reports: Unprecedented Maya Mural Found, Contradicts 2012 "Doomsday" Myth:

tlatollotl:

In the last known largely unexcavated Maya megacity, archaeologists have uncovered the only known mural adorning an ancient Maya house, a new study says—and it’s not just any mural.

In addition to a still vibrant scene of a king and his retinue, the walls are rife with calculations that helped ancient scribes track vast amounts of time. Contrary to the idea the Maya predicted the end of the world in 2012, the markings suggest dates thousands of years in the future.

Perhaps most important, the otherwise humble chamber offers a rare glimpse into the inner workings of Maya society.

“The paintings we have here—we’ve never found them anyplace else,” excavation leader William Saturno told National Geographic News.

And in today’s Xultún—to the untrained eye, just 6 square miles (16 square kilometers) of jungle floor—it’s a wonder Saturno’s team found the artwork at all.

At the Guatemalan site in 2010 the Boston University archaeologist and Ph.D. student Franco Rossi were inspecting a looters’ tunnel, where an undergraduate student had noticed the faintest traces of paint on a thin stucco wall.

The pair began cleaning off 1,200-year-old mud and suddenly a little more red paint appeared.

“Suddenly Bill was like, ‘Oh my God, we have a glyph!’” Rossi said.

What the team found, after a full excavation in 2011, is likely the ancient workroom of a Maya scribe, a record-keeper of Xultún.

“The reason this room’s so interesting,” said Rossi, as he crouched in the chamber late last year, “is that … this was a workspace. People were seated on this bench” painting books that have long since disintegrated.

The books would have been filled with elaborate calculations intended to predict the city’s fortunes. The numbers on the wall were “fixed tabulations that they can then refer to—tables more or less like those in the back of your chemistry book,” he added.

“Undoubtedly this type of room exists at every Maya site in the Late Classic [period] and probably earlier, but it’s our only example thus far.”

Maya Twilight

Its facade long ago erased by erosion and creeping plant life, the scribe’s chamber was once part of a small building just off a massive Maya plaza circled by pyramids, where kings and high priests conducted ceremonies and peddlers likely sold the clay pots whose fragments now litter the forest site.

Discovered in 1915, the sprawling city was just five miles (eight kilometers) from another Maya metropolis, San Bartolo, which became famous when Saturno uncovered stunning, 2,000-year-old Maya murals there about a decade ago.

Beyond the two cities, the Maya civilization spanned much of what are now Guatemala, Belize, and Mexico’s Yucatán region. Around A.D. 900 the Classic Maya centers, including Xultún, collapsed after a series of droughts and perhaps political conflicts.

The apparent desperation of those final years may have played out on the walls of the newly revealed room—the only major excavation so far in Xultún.

A “Different Mindset,” Etched in Ancient Stucco

Despite past looting, the interior of the newfound room is nearly perfectly preserved.

Among the artworks on the three intact walls is a detailed orange painting of a man wearing white disks on his head and chest—likely the scribe himself, said Saturno, who received funding from the National Geographic Society’s Committee for Research and Exploration and Expeditions Council. (National Geographic News is a division of the Society.)

Holding a paintbrush, the scribe is reaching out to the blue-feather-bedecked king, whose elaborate likeness was hidden behind a curtain attached to the wall by human bone, according to the study, published this week in the journal Science.

But what was really interesting was what the team found next.

Working with epigrapher David Stuart and archaeologist and artist Heather Hurst, the researchers noticed several barely visible hieroglyphic texts, painted and etched along the east and north walls of the room.

One is a lunar table, and the other is a “ring number”—something previously known only from much later Maya books, where it was used as part of a backward calculation in establishing a base date for planetary cycles. Nearby is a sequence of numbered intervals corresponding to key calendrical and planetary cycles.

The calculations include dates some 7,000 years in the future, adding to evidence against the idea that the Maya thought the world would end in 2012—a modern myth inspired by an ancient calendar that depicts time starting over this year.

“We keep looking for endings,” expedition leader Saturno said in a statement. “The Maya were looking for a guarantee that nothing would change. It’s an entirely different mindset.”

Though the idea of cyclical time is nothing new in Maya studies, team member Rossi added, the Xultún mural is by far the earliest known expression of the concept.

For example, he said while pointing to the ring number, “this is something we don’t see again for over 500 years.”

Now Is the Time

The Maya at Xultún were likely less concerned with the end of the world than the end of their world, according to Mayan-writing expert David Freidel of Washington University in St. Louis.

For ninth-century Maya, tabulating astronomical calendars to predict times of plenty was akin to gauging the stock market today, said Freidel, who wasn’t involved in the new study.

When the Mural was made, the Xultún region was facing “a period of intense drought. In fact, cities were collapsing in various parts of the Maya world in this era,” he said.

“The preoccupation of this king and his courtiers with astronomical calculation is not an arcane exercise. It has a very practical consequence for the people of the city of Xultún, which is, What the hell is going on with the economy?”

Xultún Discovery “Pretty Wild”

During tough times, the Maya looked to their leaders to divine the intents of the gods and appease them.

In turn, those rulers may have looked to the scribes, who many archaeologists believe used past events—in combination with mysterious, complex arithmetic—to predict the future.

As such, the newfound workroom could hold secrets into how the long-forgotten political system operated.

But for the scientists, the mural is also about the joy of discovery.

“To be uncovering glyphs and reading them right off the wall—to be the first one in 1,200 years to read something? I mean, it’s pretty wild,” Rossi said.

Sadly, we may never understand the full context of the workroom. Many of the glyphs are badly faded. Worse, the entire city of Xultún was looted clean during the 70s, leaving very little other writing or antiquities.

Because of this, and despite Xultún’s obvious prominence in the Maya world, many archaeologists had written off the site.

“And yet we’ve still found things here that we’ve never seen anyplace else,” excavation leader Saturno said. “And we only started looking three years ago.”

Archaeological News: Update: Pictures: New Maya Mural

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Archaeological News: Update: Pictures: New Maya Mural:

archaeologicalnews:

Archaeologist William Saturno scrapes ancient debris from a scribe’s painting-filled, roughly 1,200-year-old home in Guatemala. Calculations on the walls refer to dates after December 21, 2012

Lighted by a photographer’s lamps, a painting of the likely scribe glows within the newfound…

Read & View More Here: http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2012/05/pictures/120510-maya-apocalypse-2012-calendar-science-art-murals-saturno/

gunhilde: This fragment of a floor mosaic includes three of the...

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gunhilde:

This fragment of a floor mosaic includes three of the four main colours used in Roman mosaics, the fourth being blue. Mosaic tiles were often made from reused material. For instance, the red tiles in this fragment may have been made from broken samian ware vessels.

Painted Maya Walls Reveal Calendar Writing

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