Residents of Sardis, an ancient city in modern-day Turkey, spent decades rebuilding after a devastating earthquake struck one night in the year 17 A.D. To ward off demons and future disasters, some locals may have sealed eggshells under their new floors.
Archaeologists have discovered the tomb of Woseribre Senebkay - HeritageDaily - Archaeology News
A GROUP of archaeology students have discovered the remains of the oldest wooden house so far found in the Dales - and used by its earliest farmers.
Did the earliest human inhabitants of the Americas hail from across the Atlantic? Two distinguished scientists make a testable case.
A mysterious relief of a deity rising from a plant has been unearthed in southeast Turkey. The enigmatic sculpture depicts an unknown Roman god.
My eagerness to visit the historical ruins of Myra and the Lycian Rock tombs near Demre was because it used to be an important city of the ancient Lycian league.
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Triangular-profiled tranchet adze of probable Late Mesolithic date. The centre of the 'spine' has a pronounced saddle which appears to be deliberate, and may have facilitated hafting. Recovered from subsoil at Pentlows Farm, Hertfordshire.
A new discovery of thousands of Stone Age tools has provided a major insight into human innovation 325,000 years ago and how early technological developments spread across the world, according to newly published research.
Bishop Museum’s assistant anthropologist, Dr. Mara Mulrooney, conducted a six year study on Rapa Nui (Easter Island) about the island’s theoretical civilization collapse. Results from her groundbreaking doctoral dissertation entitled “Continuity or Collapse? Diachronic Settlement and Land Use in Hanga Ho‘onu, Rapa Nui (Easter Island)” are outlined in an article published in the December issue of the Journal of Archaeological Science. This new evidence debunks previous theories that the islanders “self-destructed” before Europeans first visited in 1722. Moai at the Rapa Nui National Park [Credit: WikiCommons] As popularized in Jared Diamond’s 2005 book Collapse, Rapa Nui is often viewed as a prime example of what happens when people lose sight of what they are doing to their environment. According to the popular narrative, the Rapa Nui people committed “environmental suicide” by deforesting their island home. But new evidence collected by Dr. Mulrooney and colleagues is challenging that story. “The new picture that emerges from these results is really one of sustainability and continuity rather than collapse, which sheds new light on what we can really learn from Rapa Nui,” said Mulrooney. “Based on these new findings, perhaps Rapa Nui should be the poster-child of how human ingenuity can result in success, rather than failure.” Dr. Mulrooney analyzed over 300 radiocarbon dates from across the island, including 15 dates from new excavations in the northern area of the island. These new findings, along with the re-analysis of previously collected dates, showed that large tracts of Rapa Nui’s interior continued to be used for agricultural production of foods like sweet potatoes and taro, even after European contact with the island. This directly challenges the previous belief that these areas were abandoned as the island chiefdom supposedly collapsed. These results, together with recent results from Dr. Mulrooney’s colleagues Thegn Ladefoged, Ph.D. (University of Auckland), Christopher Stevenson, Ph.D. (Virginia Commonwealth University), and Sonia Haoa (an archaeologist from Rapa Nui), who have been analyzing the ancient gardens of the island, suggest that the Rapa Nui people managed to transform their island home into a more productive and sustainable environment. These new findings suggest that it was not until the fatal impacts of European contact in the 18th century that Rapanui society experienced a real societal collapse due to introduced diseases. Source: Bishop Museum [December 13, 2013] Labels ArchaeoHeritage, Archaeology, Australasia, Breakingnews, Easter Island, Oceania, Polynesia TANN you might also like Newer Post Older Post
Fisherman often toss around the term 'I got lucky' to humbly admit having caught something extraordinary. But that phrase is inadequate for the Russian fisherman who recently accidentally caught a 4,000-year-old Bronze statue of a pagan god.
One of the most hotly debated issues in current human origins research focuses on how the 4.4 million-year-old African species Ardipithecus ramidus is related to the human lineage. New research confirms "Ardi's" close evolutionary relationship to humans. Researchers turned to the base of a beautifully preserved partial cranium of Ardi, which reveals a pattern of similarity that links Ardi to Australopithecus and modern humans and but not to apes.
Explore the British Museum collection and journey through two million years of human history.
Period: Old Kingdom–First Intermediate Period. Dynasty: Dynasty 5–8. Date: ca. 2465–2100 B.C.. Geography: From Egypt. Medium: Carnelian. Dimensions: H...