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collective-history: The Nimrud ivories are carved ivory plaques...

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collective-history:

The Nimrud ivories are carved ivory plaques and figures dating from the 9th to the 7th centuries BC that were excavated from the Assyrian city of Nimrud (in modern Ninawa in Iraq) during the 19th and 20th centuries. Many of the ivories were taken to the United Kingdom and were deposited in (though not owned by) the British Museum. In 2011, the Museum acquired most of the British-held ivories through a donation and purchase and is to put a selection on view. It is intended that the remainder will be returned to Iraq. A significant number of ivories were already held by Iraqi institutions but many have been lost or damaged through war and looting.


positive-press-daily: China unearths over 100 new terracotta...

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positive-press-daily:

China unearths over 100 new terracotta warriors

The life-size figures were excavated near the Qin Emperor’s mausoleum in China’s northern Xi’an city over the course of three years, and archaeologists also uncovered 12 pottery horses, parts of chariots, weapons and tools.

“The… excavation on the 200-square-metre (2,152-square-feet) site has found a total of 110 terracotta figurines,” Shen Maosheng from the Qin Shihuang Terracotta Warriors and Horses Museum — which oversees the tomb — told AFP.

“The most significant discovery this time around is that the relics that were found were well-preserved and colourfully painted,” Shen, deputy head of the museum’s archaeology department, said.

He added that archaeologists had pinpointed the location of another 11 warriors but had yet to unearth them. The discovery is the latest in China’s cultural sector, after experts found that the Great Wall of China — which like the Terracotta Army is a UNESCO World Heritage site — was much longer than previously thought.

Shen said experts had expected the colours on some of the warriors and wares uncovered at the site to have faded over the centuries, and were surprised to see how well preserved they still were. The finds also included a shield that was reportedly used by soldiers in the Qin Dynasty (221-206 BC), with red, green and white geometric patterns.

Qin Shihuang — the Qin emperor who had the army built — presided over the unification of China in 221 BC and is seen as the first emperor of the nation. The ancient terracotta army was discovered in 1974 by a peasant digging a well. It represents one of the greatest archaeological finds of modern times, and was listed as a World Heritage Site in 1987.

The news comes after a five-year archaeological survey found the Great Wall of China was more than double the previously estimated length. The survey — released to the public last week — found the wall was 21,196 kilometres (13,170 miles) long, compared to an official 2009 figure of 8,851 kilometres.

Beijing authorities on Saturday also reiterated plans to open two new sections of the Great Wall to tourists and expand two other existing areas to help meet booming demand.

Archaeological News: Rare find at Waterloo of intact 200-year remains

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Archaeological News: Rare find at Waterloo of intact 200-year remains:

archaeologicalnews:

AFP - Almost 200 years after Prussian and English troops defeated Napoleon at Waterloo, Belgian archeologists have unearthed the complete remains of a young soldier in what they dubbed a rare find.

“You can almost see him dying,” Belgian archeologist Dominique Bosquet said of the skeleton, lying on its back with the spherical musket bullet that felled the soldier still between his ribs.

“The skeleton is intact,” Bosquet told RTL television on Tuesday.

Believed to have died June 18, 1815, the remains were found under 40 centimetres (15 inches) of soil as if the young soldier’s comrades had hurriedly buried him when he fell on the battleground.

His uniform had been eaten away but archaeologists were studying a spoon, a coin, a leather strap and a piece of wood carved with the initials C.B. to see whether they might help to identify the skeleton.

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arterupestre: Algerien by ursulazrich on Flickr.

Prehistoric female and male figurines - the astonishing Pilling collection, C1000 C.E. Utah


Archaeological News: Archaeologists Find Japan's Oldest Census Registration Records

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Archaeological News: Archaeologists Find Japan's Oldest Census Registration Records:

archaeologicalnews:

OSAKA, June 13 (Bernama) —

Japanese archaeologists have found tablets containing census registration records dating back to the seventh century within remains located in Dazaifu city in Fukuoka Prefecture, southwestern Japan.


The tablets are believed to be the oldest census registration records in Japan’s history, Xinhua news agency reported.

The city’s Cultural Assets Section said the team, which examined the tablets with infrared rays, found at least 16 names of families along with their titles and relationships written on both sides of one of the tablets measuring 31 centimeters long and eight centimeters wide.

The description on the tablet also includes some words related to changes of address and historical names of places that were used between the year 685 and 701, leading archaeologists to believe that tablets were used as a form of census registration during that period.

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Archaeology.org's top ten discoveries of 2011

thingsorganizedneatly: SUBMISSION: My first ever archaeology...

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thingsorganizedneatly:

SUBMISSION: My first ever archaeology dig kit. I sharpened the trowel myself.

ed: Excellent! Have fun and stay hydrated. I really enjoyed field school.

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thesherd: Stunning reproductions of archaeological artifacts...

archaeologyman: The Stone Fortress/Migdol Temple (ca. 1650-1500...

Archaeological News: Archaeological Site in Kenya Opening Window on Early Human Tool-Making

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Archaeological News: Archaeological Site in Kenya Opening Window on Early Human Tool-Making:

archaeologicalnews:

At a site in the Homa Peninsula of Lake Victoria, Kenya, scientists are uncovering stone tools and fossils that are shedding new light on early human manufacture and use of stone tools, as well as their habitat and behavior.

Led by co-directors Dr. Thomas Plummer of Queens College, City University of New York and Dr. Rick Potts of the Smithsonian Institution, excavations at the site, called Kanjera South, have revealed a large and diversified assortment of Oldowan stone tools, fossil animal remains and other flora and faunal evidence that is building a picture of hominin, or early human, life and behavior in a grassland environment about 2 million years ago. Oldowan stone tools represent the earliest known human or hominin stone tool industry, named after the Olduvai Gorge, where Louis Leakey first discovered examples in the 1930’s. This early industry was typically composed of simple “pebble tools” such as choppers, scrapers and pounders, a type of technology used from about 2.6 to 1.7 million years ago.

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Iraqi government to buy historical buildings

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tammuz:

June 13, 2012 

According to an IMN News Network report, the Iraqi Ministry of Tourism and Antiquities announced today that 1.6 million U.S. dollars will be dedicated to buy historical buildings in several locations in the country. Ali Al-Hashimi, a spokesperson for the ministry, stated that goal will be buying historical locations and buildings that are 200-300 years old. The plan focuses on paying more attention to the more recent historical periods of Mesopotamia.

IMN News Network

My Archaeology Board on Pintrest!

tammuz: Relief from the Temple of Nabu in the Assyrian city of...

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tammuz:

Relief from the Temple of Nabu in the Assyrian city of Khorsabad or Dur-Sharrukin. The Oriental Institute Museum of the University of Chicago, Chicago, IL.   

Photo by Babylon Chronicle

natureconservancy: Take a close look at Fair Trade cocoa in the...

Archaeological News: Archaeologist who found king's grave to get honour

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Archaeological News: Archaeologist who found king's grave to get honour:

archaeologicalnews:


FOR as long as the Queen has been on the throne, Kent archaeologist Brian Philp has been excavating and protecting threatened historical sites.

But when he was called in to excavate a site in Faversham in 1965, he had no idea he was about to discover one of the most significant buildings in the town’s history.

Once a dominating church the size of Canterbury Cathedral, Faversham’s Royal Abbey was destroyed and the site lost for more than 400 years before digging began at what is now the grounds of Queen Elizabeth Grammar School.

An eight-week excavation, undertaken as the site was about to be developed, revealed a large church, 361-feet long and which was proven to be the royal mausoleum of King Stephen, who reigned between 1135 and 1154.
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