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Modern Lessons From a Lost Language | Anthropology in Practice, Scientific American Blog Network

Modern Lessons From a Lost Language | Anthropology in Practice, Scientific American Blog Network | Archaeology News | Scoop.it
Note: This article originally appeared on AiP on December 13, 2010. It won a Research Blogging Award.

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9 Highly Questionable Actions Committed By Indiana Jones

9 Highly Questionable Actions Committed By Indiana Jones | Archaeology News | Scoop.it

I’m sure this is common knowledge to everyone reading this article, but Indiana Jones is one of the most famous and recognisable characters in all of pop culture. Modelled after the do-gooders of 1930s film serials, Indiana Jones has become a film icon and one of the most universally beloved movie characters of all time.

With intelligence, bravado, wit and charm, Indy uppercuts Nazis, cracks his bullwhip and seduces the panties off of many attractive females… all while saving the world. Women want to be with him, men want to be him, and Nazis gleefully bend over and receive their beat downs at the mere presence of his fists. It simply isn’t possible to name a cooler character than Indiana Jones, and don’t even try to say Han Solo. Compared to Indy, Han is just a scruffy nerf-herder.

The Indiana Jones franchise has not only been commercially successful but has had a profound and lasting influence on society. Despite being a homage to various adventurers who came before him, Indy has directly influenced the characterisation of heroes like Nathan Drake of the Uncharted videogame series and Lara Croft of Tomb Raider.

Sylvain Rotillon's curator insight, Today, 10:55 AM

Excellent ! When I worked with archaeologists, people on the field were very frequently talk about Indy as a way to establish the contact. It creates good feelings, but the dark side of Indy, which is well detailed in this article, is that he is an old fashioned archaeologist only interested by artifacts. Despite the huge evolution of this science since few decades, archaeology is still perceived as a science of artifacts, not plainly as a social science. Indy is partly responsible of this, but we still love him !

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Auchmar Estate House

Auchmar Estate House | Archaeology News | Scoop.it
The original estate house on the 110 acre property called Clairmont, so named by Issac Buchannon who built his estate here in the 1830's. The actual 10 acre estate he named Auchmar after his home in Scotland.

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Site provides clearer picture of China's past |Society |chinadaily.com.cn

Site provides clearer picture of China's past |Society |chinadaily.com.cn | Archaeology News | Scoop.it
New archaeological discoveries in Yuyao city, in eastern China's Zhejiang province, provide a clearer picture of life in China's Neolithic age and confirm that the nation originated the practice of paddy cultivation.
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Early church and burials found at Lincoln castle : Archaeology News from Past Horizons

Early church and burials found at Lincoln castle : Archaeology News from Past Horizons | Archaeology News | Scoop.it

Archaeologists digging under Lincoln Castle have made contact with the remains of a previously unknown church that is at least 1,000 years old.

The earliest find was a cemetery with several skeletons, associated with the remains of two stone walls. Further investigation revealed more burials, including at least one stone coffin. As explorations continue, it seems that the remains all belong to a stone church built after the Romans left and before the Norman conquerors came. During this period the English and the Danes competed for supremacy in Northern England.

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Topofly: East Lomond Hill Fort, Glory and Shadow

Topofly: East Lomond Hill Fort, Glory and Shadow | Archaeology News | Scoop.it

An early start and a short hike saw me on top of East Lomond Hill just as the sun began to rise, ready to get some kite aerial shots. Approaching the distinctive profile of the hill - which can be seen right across Fife and a good distance beyond - I could see wisps of cloud forming off of the hilltop, visible in this photo.

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Learning About Life From Death in Akhenaten's Egypt

Learning About Life From Death in Akhenaten's Egypt | Archaeology News | Scoop.it
The city of Amarna was a 17 year period of change and drama in Egypt's ancient history. It was established as the capital city of Egypt in 1353 BC during the late 18th dynasty by Pharaoh Akhenaten....
NHarbutt's curator insight, May 16, 8:07 PM

I am a big fan of the egyptians

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No More Noh Mul? Contractor Bulldozes Mayan Temple : Archaeology News from Past Horizons

No More Noh Mul? Contractor Bulldozes Mayan Temple : Archaeology News from Past Horizons | Archaeology News | Scoop.it

A major Mayan Monument had been bulldozed for roadfill aggregate. 7news went to Orange Walk District, near the northern district boundary to find out that Noh Mul – or at least a large part of it – is no more. Jules Vasquez reports.

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Voyage Into Ancient China’s Bronzes - The Epoch Times

Voyage Into Ancient China’s Bronzes - The Epoch Times | Archaeology News | Scoop.it
An extraordinary voyage through mythical China is offered to visitors of Paris’s Guimet Museum in a rare collection of ancient China bronzes.
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Culture wars: why attack heritage?

Culture wars: why attack heritage? | Archaeology News | Scoop.it
The Nazi burning of books considered "Un-German" is only one of many historical examples of culture coming under attack.
David Connolly's insight:

and today!

 

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Plague Helped Bring Down Roman Empire : DNews

Plague Helped Bring Down Roman Empire : DNews | Archaeology News | Scoop.it
The cause of the Justinianic Plague appears to be settled through new DNA evidence.

 

Plague is a fatal disease so infamous that it has become synonymous with any dangerous, widespread contagion. It was linked to one of the first known examples of biological warfare, when Mongols catapulted plague victims into cities.

The bacterium that causes plague, Yersinia pestis, has been linked with at least two of the most devastating pandemics in recorded history. One, the Great Plague, which lasted from the 14th to 17th centuries, included the infamous epidemic known as the Black Death, which may have killed nearly two-thirds of Europe in the mid-1300s. Another, the Modern Plague, struck around the world in the 19th and 20th centuries, beginning in China in the mid-1800s and spreading to Africa, the Americas, Australia, Europe and other parts of Asia.

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ancient ale: once upon a time ...

ancient ale: once upon a time ... | Archaeology News | Scoop.it

Once upon a time in the back garden, I started to do some archaeological grain processing experiments. It was the summer of 1995. I'd just finished an archaeology degree. Now I was enrolled on a master's degree course at Manchester University and I was beginning my investigations into how people may have made the ale in prehistory. 

In my final year as an undergraduate, I had chosen the British Neolithic and Bronze Age as my specialist subject. We were told that, in Bronze Age Britain- Beakers were for Beer! Warriors buried with wristguards and bows and arrows and fine beaker pots for their ale! It got a laugh from the class, as any mention of beer and brewing seems to do.I'm still not sure why - but that was when I first began to wonder. "OK. So, how did they make it?" 

Being married to a craft brewer, I was used to living in a brew house. The sacks of crushed malt. The delicious aroma of the mash. The rituals. The water and wort spilled on the kitchen floor. Steam emanating from the out house door as he mashed the malt and boiled the wort. We lived in a big, old Victorian house and the dining room was where the beer was fermented. We had a cellar to keep it in. He would bring a sack of crushed malt in through the front door and transform it into beer. It was very good beer. It was a fairly simple process.

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Uruk rises again in digital 3D : Archaeology News from Past Horizons

Uruk rises again in digital 3D : Archaeology News from Past Horizons | Archaeology News | Scoop.it

Uruk, in modern-day Iraq, is one of the first cities in the world and was populated almost without interruption for over 5,000 years – from the 4th millennium BC to the 1st millennium AD.

The city is famous for the invention of cuneiform writing at the end of the 4th millennium, in  the “late Uruk period”. During this creative flourishing the city already covered an area of 2.5 square kilometres and many distinctive architectural features were invented and developed.

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From rumour to bulldozer - Al-Ahram Weekly report on Egypt's crumbling archaeology

From rumour to bulldozer - Al-Ahram Weekly report on Egypt's crumbling archaeology | Archaeology News | Scoop.it

More than two years after the January 2011 Revolution, urban and agricultural encroachment continues to threaten Egypt’s archaeological sites.

The lack of security that overwhelmed the country during and after the revolution has certainly taken its toll. The sanctity of spiritual and archaeological environments have been desecrated, with plundering and destruction by vandals, thieves and neighbouring residents being carried out virtually unchecked.

Well-organised and well-armed gangs of thieves are reportedly plundering archaeological sites, while illegal construction encroaches on and sometimes even covers them.

The rich Islamic site of Istabl Antar in Egypt’s first Islamic capital has been isolated, as have Al-Muizz Street in historic Cairo; the ancient Egyptian necropolis of Dahshour; the Giza Plateau; the New Kingdom site of Matariya; the area of Al-Bordan on the Alexandria-Marsa Matrouh highway and the Hagg Kandil site at Amarna in Minya in Upper Egypt, to mention just a few.

Some building encroachments were removed safely and without damage, but for others help came too late and some areas of historical importance, where genuine objects and important remains are still hidden in the sand, were ruined or looted.

 

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Ancient discovery set to rewrite Australian history

Ancient discovery set to rewrite Australian history | Archaeology News | Scoop.it
Copper coins and a 70-year-old map with an ‘X’ marked on it may lead to a discovery that could change everything we've been led to believe about Australia's discovery.
David Connolly's insight:

hmmm    there is more read into this than is real. 

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Revealed: Why Ancient Egyptians preferred to have sex in summers?

Revealed: Why Ancient Egyptians preferred to have sex in summers? | Archaeology News | Scoop.it
The fact came to light after the excavation of over 700 graves of ancient Egyptians.
David Connolly's curator insight, Today, 4:51 AM

work than one out??

 

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Al Ruwaida site yields unique archaeological find

Al Ruwaida site yields unique archaeological find | Archaeology News | Scoop.it
From the elegant silhouette on the tails of the national airline fleet to the overstuffed animals perched atop the Post Office roundabout...
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Mysterious Minoans Were European, DNA Finds : DNews

Mysterious Minoans Were European, DNA Finds : DNews | Archaeology News | Scoop.it
The ancient Minoans were genetically European, DNA study reveals.
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New geoglyphs of the Jordanian Harrat : Archaeology News from Past Horizons

New geoglyphs of the Jordanian Harrat : Archaeology News from Past Horizons | Archaeology News | Scoop.it

The eastern “panhandle” of the kingdom of Jordan is partly covered by a vast and rugged lava desert, the Harrat, covering about ca. 11.400 km2 (Fig. 1). Scoured by wind in winter and scorched dry by the sun in summer, the surface is covered by black basalt stones, making this area seem as uninviting, hostile and inaccessible as is imaginable.

Nevertheless this modern day desolate desert proves to be as rich in archaeological heritage as one may wish.

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Unique workshop of Palaeolithic hunters discovered in Silesia | News | Science & Scholarship in Poland

Unique workshop of Palaeolithic hunters discovered in Silesia | News | Science & Scholarship in Poland | Archaeology News | Scoop.it
More than a thousand flint tools and waste generated on during their treatment were discovered near Pietrowice Wielkie (Silesia) by archaeologists from the Institute of Archaeology, University of Wrocław - told PAP head researcher Dr. Andrzej Wiśniewski.

The flint workshops, remains of which were found by archaeologists, had been used by Neanderthals. The researchers are waiting for more detailed information on the site dating. The workshop is certainly more than 45 thousand years old.

"Tools were made by a specific canon of Neanderthals living in Central Europe. These items have a cutting edge on both sides, they are bifacial" - said Dr. Wiśniewski.

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Illegal Construction on Black Sea Archaeology Site Hides behind Bulgarian ... - Novinite.com

Illegal Construction on Black Sea Archaeology Site Hides behind Bulgarian ... - Novinite.com | Archaeology News | Scoop.it
Novinite.com
Illegal Construction on Black Sea Archaeology Site Hides behind Bulgarian ...
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No More Noh Mul? Contractor Bulldozes Mayan Temple

No More Noh Mul? Contractor Bulldozes Mayan Temple | Archaeology News | Scoop.it

A major Mayan Monument had been bulldozed for roadfill aggregate. 7news went to Orange Walk District, near the northern district boundary to find out that Noh Mul – or at least a large part of it – is no more. It’s a stunning development – and Jules Vasquez reports.

 

Jules Vasquez reporting
Noh Mul. it’s name means the Big Hill but it’s not so big any more, this once towering and stout ceremonial center in San Jose/San Pablo has been whittled down to a narrow core by excavators and bulldozers. Whodunnit? Contractors who’re using the rich gravel and limestone content to fill roads in nearby Douglas Village.

 

Now, this was the main temple, the ceremonial center for Noh Mul, at about 20 metres among the tallest buildings in Northern Belize - and it’s not centuries old, it’s millennia, thousands of years old and the thought that it’s rich limestone bricks cut with stone tools in the BC era, the thought that this could be used for road fill is a manifest outrage and a particularly painful one for these Archeologists who were called out to the area today. We were there when they first arrived and got their initial emotional reaction:

 

Dr. Allan Moore - Archaeologist, Institute of Archaeology
"This is one of the largest bulding in Norther Belize. I am appalled! I was hoping that when I was driving up from the main San Juan road that it would not be this one but when I got closer I couldn't believe it when I saw all the trucks. This is an incredible destruction."

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Space Archaeology: Alice Gorman at TEDxSydney

Alice Gorman is an archaeologist who specialises in the material culture of space exploration, from its origins in the 1930s through to the present. Her part...
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Dienekes’ Anthropology Blog: Links between Mycenaeans and Scandinavia

Dienekes’ Anthropology Blog: Links between Mycenaeans and Scandinavia | Archaeology News | Scoop.it

Dienekes assembles the recent papers that looks at the connection between Bronze Age Scandanavia and the Mycenean state in Greece.  

 

a quote to start off the collection states a simple fact that has large implications.  

 

It turns out that all examined Swedish subject except one - a slaggbit - comes from mines and ore deposits from sites in Cyprus, Sardinia, the Iberian Peninsula, the Massif Central in the current France, Tyrol and the British Isles. Copper has been transported, and in return it has been shipped back large amounts of amber. What emerges is a picture of a time when international contacts over large water was obvious, and there are already some 2000 years before the Vikings set off on their journeys.

http://sverigesradio.se/sida/avsnitt/45788?programid=412

 

 

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Elephant’s Tomb may have been Mithraic Temple : Archaeology News from Past Horizons

Elephant’s Tomb may have been Mithraic Temple : Archaeology News from Past Horizons | Archaeology News | Scoop.it

The Carmona necropolis (Spain) is a collection of funeral structures from between the 1st century B.C. and the 2nd century A.D. One of these is known as the Elephant’s Tomb because a statue in the shape of an elephant was found in the interior of the structure.

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Underwater archeologists helping tell story of Louisbourg siege

Underwater archeologists helping tell story of Louisbourg siege | Archaeology News | Scoop.it
LOUISBOURG — A team of underwater archeologists is diving to the remains of 18th-century French warships that were sunk during the second siege of Louisbourg in 1758.
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