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Archaeological News: Neanderthals ... They're Just Like Us?

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Archaeological News: Neanderthals ... They're Just Like Us?:

archaeologicalnews:

The Neanderthals are both the most familiar and the least understood of all our fossil kin.

For decades after the initial discovery of their bones in a cave in Germany in 1856 Homo neanderthalensis was viewed as a hairy brute who stumbled around Ice Age Eurasia on bent knees, eventually to be replaced by elegant, upright Cro-Magnon, the true ancestor of modern Europeans.

Science has long since killed off the notion of that witless caveman, but Neanderthals have still been regarded as quintessential losers—a large-brained, well-adapted species of human that went extinct nevertheless, yielding the Eurasian continent to anatomically modern humans, who began to migrate out of Africa some 60,000 years ago.

Lately, the relationship between Neanderthals and modern humans has gotten spicier.

According to a new study that analyzed traces of Neanderthal DNA in present-day humans, Neanderthals may have been interbreeding with some of the ancestors of modern Eurasians as recently as 37,000 years ago. 

Read more.


sage-femme: Anthropologists: First Etruscan Pyramids found in...

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sage-femme:

Anthropologists: First Etruscan Pyramids found in Italy

The pyramids were spotted by a series of ancient stairs that had been carved into the wall of what is now a wine cellar.

collective-history: This is the monumental complex in Torre...

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collective-history:

This is the monumental complex in Torre Argentina (Rome), where Julius Caesar was stabbed.

Archaeologists believe they have found the first physical evidence of the spot where Julius Caesar died, according to a new Spanish National Research Council report.

Caesar, the head of the Roman Republic, was stabbed to death by a group of rival Roman senators on March 15, 44 B.C., the Ides of March. The assassination is well-covered in classical texts, but until now, researchers had no archaeological evidence of the place where it happened.

Now, archaeologists have unearthed a concrete structure nearly 10 feet wide and 6.5 feet tall that may have been erected by Augustus, Julius Caesar’s successor, to condemn the assassination. The structure is at the base of the Curia, or Theater, of Pompey, the spot where classical writers reported the stabbing took place.

“We always knew that Julius Caesar was killed in the Curia of Pompey on March 15th 44 B.C. because the classical texts pass on so, but so far no material evidence of this fact, so often depicted in historicist painting and cinema, had been recovered,” Antonio Monterroso, a researcher at the Spanish National Research Council, said in a statement.

Classical texts also say that years after the assassination, the Curia was closed and turned into a memorial chapel for Caesar. The researchers are studying this building along with another monument in the same complex, the Portico of the Hundred Columns, or Hecatostylon; they are looking for links between the archaeology of the assassination and what has been portrayed in art.

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Molecular fossils: new compounds from 4900-year-old wood

Archaeological News: Ancient Tomb Found at 'Sweden's Stonehenge'

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Archaeological News: Ancient Tomb Found at 'Sweden's Stonehenge':

archaeologicalnews:

Swedish archaeologists have unearthed what is presumed to be a dolmen, or a portal tomb, that is believed to be over 5,000 years old near the megalithic monument Ale’s stones in southern Sweden.

”The findings confirm what we have believed; that this has been a special place for a very long time”, said archaeologist Bengt Söderberg to news agency TT. 

On Saturday, the first day of the dig, the scientists already had a hunch that they would find something on the site, expecting a Stone Age grave and a Bronze Age monument. 

And since, the hunch has become stronger.

 Read more.

Archaeological News: The Assyrian City of Tushhan: A Race Against Time

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Archaeological News: The Assyrian City of Tushhan: A Race Against Time:

archaeologicalnews:

The ancient mound at Ziyaret Tepe in Diyarbakir province of southeastern Turkey, comprises two distinct areas: a high citadel and an extensive lower town. Since 1997 an international team of archaeologists have been excavating a site that was occupied nearly continuously for 2400 years from the Early Bronze age(3000 BCE)

Over most of this time Ziyaret Tepe was a modest village situated on the fertile Tigris floodplain. However, Professor Timothy Matney of the University of Akron, (the project director) in collaboration with Professor McGinnis of  the University of Cambridge discovered that during the Middle Iron Age (c. 882 – 610BCE) Ziyaret Tepe acted as an important urban centre situated on the northern periphery of the Assyrian Empire and was known as the city of Tushhan. 

Read more.

Archaeological News: Cracking the code: the decipherment of Linear B 60 years on

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Archaeological News: Cracking the code: the decipherment of Linear B 60 years on:

archaeologicalnews:

When during the early 20th century archaeologists excavated some of the most famous sites of Ancient Greece – notably Knossos on the island of Crete and Mycenae and Pylos on the mainland – they found large numbers of clay tablets inscribed with a type of script that baffled them. It was significantly different to any other script known at the time. Moreover, it was immediately clear that there were at least two variants of this type of writing.

These scripts – characterised by about 90 different characters, and on the clay tablets interspersed with signs for numerals as well as the depiction of every-day objects and commodities such as pots, cloth and grain – acquired the name ‘Linear’. Linear because they were more abstract and characterised by a more linear style than the earlier hieroglyphic type of writing, also found on Crete. The two variants were given the names Linear A and B. 

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ancientart: Detail of the elamite rock relief said Kul-e Farah...

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ancientart:

Detail of the elamite rock relief said Kul-e Farah IV: rank of adoring/praying devotes. City of Izeh, Khuzestan province, Iran.

Photo taken by dynamosquito:

The relief is the 4th of a set of 6 carved on rocks and cliffs of a little gorge at the South East of Izeh, ancient elamite city of Ayapir. It was discovered in the 19th century by the british orientalist traveller and archaeologist Austen Henry Layard, This one, as the others of this site dates of the 7-8th centuries BC.

It consists in the representation of either a royal audience, or a religious office, featuring a female character as testify the dressing, haircut, and of a high social rank if not royal as testify the bigger dimensions compared to the other characters. This main character is is surrounded by multiple ranks of praying or adoring devotes, the ranks are carved on all the disposable surfaces left by the rocks and the natural volumes. The position of the ranks is determined by the form of the roc, ranks can then be separated by large natural riffs. Another royal character is shown enthroned.

The carving is not deep, using a very slight volume, enabling the possibility of perspective. Added to such technical factors, the location on a cliff, unprotected by an upper volume, explains why most of the relief is so damaged. Such religious and royal representation is a classic theme in the elamite art of rock reliefs. The disposition in ranks probably inspired the later Persian achaemenian reliefs as one can see in Naqsh-e Rostam or in Persepolis

Times Opinion on Tumblr: The truth about Radovan Karadzic and the Bosnian War

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Times Opinion on Tumblr: The truth about Radovan Karadzic and the Bosnian War:

timesopinion:

Oliver Kamm

Radovan Karadzic, the well-known quack doctor, began his defence today at The Hague. He is on trial, before the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia, for war crimes, crimes against humanity and genocide. It is already clear that he has particular  hostility to Western journalists who exposed his crimes. Penny Marshall of ITN was among them, and she writes here that Karadzic still blames the messenger.

At a press conference in London in July 1992, Karadzic, as Bosnian Serb leader, had brazenly denied the allegations of atrocities and challenged journalists to go and see for themselves. Unfortunately for him, Penny Marshall and her colleague Ian Williams, and Ed Vulliamy of The Guardian, did so. Karadzic mistakenly assumed that he would be able to dispose of the evidence before the journalists arrived. These British journalists exposed inhuman conditions in which emaciated prisoners were incarcerated at Omarska and Trnopolje in Northern Bosnia.

Ms Marshall remarks that, while Karadzic was in hiding, “some of his apologists and supporters launched an attack on my journalistic integrity in an attempt to destroy my reputation and damage ITN”. They did indeed. A publication called LM Magazine claimed that the film footage was faked. It was a fantastic libel that poisoned public debate far beyond the political fringe where LM resided. I’ve written here about these lies, which you still find ventilated in the ideological netherworld where the Stalinist Left and the xenophobic Right meet.

The truth about Trnopolje, Sarajevo and Srebrenica is as it was reported by these and other brave journalists (including my colleague Richard Beeston, our Foreign Editor). Their revelations matter for conciliation in Bosnia.

My friend Rolf Ekéus, a Swedish diplomat who served as the first head of the UN weapons inspectors in Iraq, is a Commissioner for the International Commission on Missing Persons, whose scientists have done harrowing work in Bosnia uncovering mass graves and identifying the victims. He told me last year, in an interview for The Times: “If they can know what happened to their sons or fathers, the relatives of the dead can make peace in their souls.”

@OliverKamm

Read more: “I should have been rewarded for all the good things that I’ve done” says Karadzic as war crimes trial opens

Archaeological News: Archaeological dig finds lost Dartmoor manor

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Archaeological News: Archaeological dig finds lost Dartmoor manor:

archaeologicalnews:

A recent archaeological excavation has discovered the remains of the lost manor of North Hall in Widecombe-in-the-Moor.

Andy Crabb, archaeologist for Dartmoor National Park Authority, who led the community excavation said: ‘In five days of digging, well over 50 individual volunteers helped out -a fantastic achievement. The volunteers came from Widecombe village, the Widecombe Local History Group and from the wider local community.

“Despite some wet summer weather at the start of the dig, all seemed to greatly enjoy their experience of archaeological excavation with many returning again and again throughout the week.”

Groups of local school children from Widecombe-in-the-Moor and Islington Primary Schools also enjoyed visits to the site and helped out with the digging.

Read more.

3dprintingiscool: 3D Printed Prehistoric Tools Sometimes it’s...

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3dprintingiscool:

3D Printed Prehistoric Tools

Sometimes it’s nice to be reminded how far we have progressed as species, and what better way to do that than combine the next hot-tipped technical revolution with the earliest gadgets known to mankind?

Two Iraeli designers have done exactly that; Ami Drach and Dov Ganchrow showcased their modern-age flint instruments at the 2012 Budapest Design Week. The encasing handles were made by 3D scanning the stone and then 3D printed to fit.

Of course, Drach and Ganchrow are not saying that flint-knapping is the future, but built the tools to raise questions and discussion: “We are fascinated by the prospect of integrating thousand-year-old cutting implements manufactured by knapping with the most contemporary cutting-edge design and manufacturing technologies.

“Here we look again as these basic tools with our current perspective and knowledge of tool making to ask the following: what happens when these two polarities meet? How will their meeting affect the ‘natural’ existence of each entity? What new forms are generated? How does the digital age influence the making of such tools? And how does ‘craft’ get updated in the process?”

Ami Drake sadly passed away last month at the age of 49.

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Archaeological News: Archaeologists Plan New Dig at Troy

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Archaeological News: Archaeologists Plan New Dig at Troy:

archaeologicalnews:

Armed with shovels, trowels and new biotechnology tools, archaeologists plan to march into Troy next year for excavations at the famed ancient city.

“Our goal is to add a new layer of information to what we already know about Troy,” said William Aylward, a classics professor at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, who will lead the expedition. “The archaeological record is rich. If we take a closer look with new scientific tools for study of ancient biological and cultural environments, there is much to be found for telling the story of this world heritage site.”

The city immortalized in Homer’s “Iliad” lies in what is today western Turkey and was rediscovered in the 1870s by German archaeology pioneer Heinrich Schliemann. Since then, researchers have been digging up the site periodically, but less than one-fifth of Troy has been excavated. 

Read more.


myhistoryblog: DSC_2220_1407 by elmor.mohamed on Flickr. Via...

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myhistoryblog:

DSC_2220_1407 by elmor.mohamed on Flickr.

Via Flickr:
Sakkara is best known for the Step Pyramid, the oldest known of Egypt’s 97 pyramids.
It was built for King Zoser, one of the greatest Kings of the third dynasty (2721-2780 BC). Originally meant as a tomb, this Pyramid was designed and built by his great architect Imhotep. The Pyramid is built as a step Pyramid, 60m high, and consisting of 6 steps; each one built on top of each other and smaller than the one below.

positive-press-daily: Mayan artwork uncovered in a Guatemalan...

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positive-press-daily:

Mayan artwork uncovered in a Guatemalan forest

Archaeologists working in one of the most impenetrable rain forests in Guatemala have stumbled on a remarkable discovery: a room full of wall paintings and numerical calculations.

The buried room apparently was a workshop used by scribes or astronomers working for a Mayan king. The paintings depict the king and members of his court. The numbers mark important periods in the Mayan calendar. The room is about the size of a walk-in closet. It’s part of the buried Mayan city of Xultun. There are painted murals on three walls, depicting a resplendent king wearing a feather and four other figures. Mayan paintings this old — the site dates to the ninth century — are very rare; tropical weather usually destroys them.

But David Stuart, an anthropologist at the University of Texas, Austin, says the numbers are the most intriguing discovery. “The wall is covered in numbers and this is something that really got our attention very early on,” he says. “This is an unusual thing about the Xultun mural.”

  • Four long numbers on the north wall of the ruined house relate to the Mayan calendar and computations about the moon, sun and possibly Venus and Mars; the dates stretch some 7,000 years into the future.

Stuart says some of the numbers are calendars that mark Mayan ceremonies, or the cycles of the moon, Venus and Mars. Some calculations appear to be efforts to predict lunar eclipses.

“It’s kind of like having a whiteboard in your office where you write down numbers you want to remember if you are a physicist or a mathematician,” Stuart says. “And it’s amazing it’s on a wall. It’s not in a book.”

Mayan numbers are written with bars and dots. Their use in calendars and astronomy is well-known from a Mayan book called the Dresden Codex, which is written on the bark of a fig tree. But the Xultun murals are centuries older than the book. Writing in the journal Science, the scientists say the murals confirm what Mayan archaeologists have been saying for years: The Mayan calendar does not predict the end of time in 2012, as some New Age prophets have argued. In fact, the murals register future time stretching far beyond 2012.

Archaeologist William Saturno from Boston University compares Mayan calendars to a car’s odometer.

“If we’re driving a car,” Satruno says, “we don’t anticipate that at 100,000 miles the car will vanish from beneath us. We know that it will reset to zero, and the next 10th of a mile we go we’ll have another number to look at.”

What these Mayan timekeepers were doing was simply marking the passage of time from past to future, but in discrete intervals. The buried city of Xultun was discovered in 1915 but was so hard to get to that archaeologists mostly ignored it. Saturno started exploring it in 2008. A member of his team found the mural room two years later, under just a few feet of soil. They got an emergency grant from the National Geographic Society to dig into it.

  • The painted figure of a man — possibly a scribe who once lived in the house built by the ancient Maya — is illuminated through a doorway to the dwelling, in northeastern Guatemala. The structure represents the first Mayan house found to contain artwork on its walls.

Looters had stolen everything removable, but the murals and the numbers remained. Saturno says there may be lots more to find at Xultun. They’ve examined only about 1 percent of the buried city.

victoriafolgueira: PEWTER PLATE From the Punta Restelos...

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victoriafolgueira:

PEWTER PLATE

From the Punta Restelos shipwreck. Recovered by the Finisterre Project.

Pewter is an alloy of mainly tin with a little amount of copper, antimony, bismuth and traditionaly lead, though it is less used today because of its toxicity. It was commonly used for tableware until the 18th and 19th centuries.

Though severely warped, relatively speaking it was in good condition with a substantial metal core and the original surface. The scratches on the surface may have been caused during or after the shipwreck, or they may be traces of its daily use. The electrolytic reduction revealed all the surface details, like the concentric lines of the bottom.

For more information on this shipwreck and others on the Finisterre coast you can read the Finisterre Project blog at the Institute of Nautical Archaeology.

steve-blogs: White House Ruins, Ancestral Pueblo Native...

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steve-blogs:

White House Ruins, Ancestral Pueblo Native American (Anasazi) ruins in Canyon de Chelly, Arizona, in 1873. The cliff dwellings were built by the Anasazi more than 500 years earlier. At the bottom, men stand and pose on cliff dwellings in a niche and on ruins on the canyon floor. Climbing ropes connect the groups of men.

Anthropologists and archeologists place the Anasazi peoples of Native American culture on the continent from the 12th Century BCE. Their unique architecture incorporated ‘Great Houses’ which averaged up to 200 rooms and could take in up to 700 

thesherd: Archaeologists are heading back to Troy next year -...

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