Showing posts with label Archaeology. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Archaeology. Show all posts

Sunday, May 12, 2019

Archaeologists Unearth Ancient Roman Moat Near Tetouan, Morocco

An assemblage of archeologists from the University of Cadiz in Spain have discovered the ruins of a Roman moat at Tamuda, an archeology site near Tetouan in northern Morocco.
The Spanish team has been excavating the Tamuda site for a decade. The research was primarily funded by the Spanish Ministry of Culture and private Spanish organization Palarq.
The Roman moat is an important discovery because it may be the first archeological finding of this kind in Morocco, stated the University of Cadiz in a press release.
It is likely to be part of a Roman military fort and would have been built around a camp, as part of a well-known Roman defensive strategy.
The ancient moat likely dates from the first century AD, during the creation of the Roman province Mauretania Tingitana. Professor Bernal from the University of Cadiz confirmed that the team would be carrying out more excavations at the site.
The excavation of the Tamuda site is a long-term project between Morocco and Spain. It was set up through a bilateral agreement between the Ministry of Culture of Morocco and the University of Cadiz.
Archeologists and researchers participating in the project come from Spain, Morocco, Argentina, Colombia, Ecuador, and Mexico, “making this important Moroccan pre-Islamic site an active international training laboratory, ” stated Professor Darío Bernal Casasola from the University of Cadiz.
The site was first discovered in 1921 by Spanish archeologist Cesar Luis de Montalbán.
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Ancient Tools Reveal 500,000-Year-Old Migration Routes of Human Ancestors in ‘Cradle of Humanity’

During excavations in Eastern Sudan, the scientists from the Wrocław University’s Institute of Archeology found remnants of the humanoids’ presence which tell the untold story of the different phases of human species migration from half a million years ago.  Instytut Archeologii Uniwersytetu Wrocławskiego/Facebook
A group of Polish archeologists have uncovered sensational proof that Homo Erectus, the ancestor of today’s humans, spread around the globe using previously undiscovered migration routes.
During excavations in Eastern Sudan, the scientists from the Wrocław University’s Institute of Archeology found remnants of the humanoids’ presence which tell the untold story of the different phases of human species migration from half a million years ago.
Discoveries in the Eastern Desert also confirm the long coexistence of Homo erectus with Homo sapiens in Africa: it is a period of at least 100,000 years, falling between 300,000 and 200,000 years ago. Both species lived there simultaneously. Instytut Archeologii Uniwersytetu Wrocławskiego/Facebook
The Polish archeologists, together with colleagues from Germany, Saudi Arabia, South Korea, and the United States decided to conduct their research north of the area, which is usually perceived as the cradle of humanity (along the Great Rift Valley, from Mozambique to the Red Sea) – the Eastern Desert in Sudan.
Enticed by the news, that gold miners in the area were uncovering prehistoric tools, the scientist not only confirmed this information but came across a lot more.
Enticed by the news, that gold miners in the area were uncovering prehistoric tools, the scientist not only confirmed this information but came across a lot more. Instytut Archeologii Uniwersytetu Wrocławskiego/Facebook


On March 6th, the archeologists summarized their project on the Institute of Archeology’s Facebook: “We just finished the last season of excavations in Sudan, which are carried out by our Institute in collaboration with Museum of Archaeology in Gdansk and Neelian University in Khartoum.
“This international project entitled ‘Homo erectus on the path to Eurasia…’ is focused on remains of Pleistocene settlement in the Eastern Desert. During this season we excavated four sites which yielded many finds.
“The oldest artifacts, which we found at archaeological site EDAR 7, are dated to 0,5 Ma [500 thousand years ago] and related to early middle Pleistocene Acheulean culture. This is the oldest known archaeological site in NE Africa.”

Homo Erectus migrations from Africa. PAP Infographics/PAP

What they found was that Homo Erectus traveled outside of Africa not only along the Nile river but also through what is now a desert which used to be a humid area with plants and rivers leading to the Red Sea.
Discoveries in the Eastern Desert also confirm the long coexistence of Homo erectus with Homo sapiens in Africa: it is a period of at least 100,000 years, falling between 300,000 and 200,000 years ago. Both species lived there simultaneously, although one gave birth to the other.
The archeologists, led by Wrocław University’s Prof. Mirosław Masojć (pictured), discovered “… an assemblage of artifacts containing, among others, choppers and chopping tools, bifacial tools (hand axes and cleavers) and big flake tools. ”Instytut Archeologii Uniwersytetu Wrocławskiego

The archeologists, led by Wrocław University’s Prof. Mirosław Masojć reveal they discovered “… an assemblage of artifacts containing, among others, choppers and chopping tools, bifacial tools (hand axes and cleavers) and big flake tools.
“Younger finds from the Middle Stone Age, which were manufactured using the Levallois method, can be linked to the settlement of this region by anatomically modern humans (Homo sapiens).
“Every day, we covered 90 kilometers in the desert from our base in Atbara to the sites. In the afternoons, after finishing field work, we devoted ourselves to analyses and recording of our artifacts. Some of the tools were chosen to be transported to Poland, which will allow us to conduct microscopic use-wear analyses.”
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Saturday, May 4, 2019

Hurricane Michael Unearths Evidence of Fort Occupied by Freed Slaves (Photos)

by N.Morgan


Entangled deep in the root balls of enormous trees toppled by Hurricane Michael, which ripped through Florida last October, was an archaeological treasure: ammunition and artifacts from Fort Gadsden, a site occupied by one of the largest communities of freed slaves in the early 1800s.

On July 27, 1816, the U.S. Navy was firing shots at the fort (then called the “Negro Fort”), when one shot hit a storage unit filled with ammunition, leading to an explosion that killed hundreds of African Americans.
Some of that ammunition, along with a number of other 19th-century artifacts from the fort, recently came to the surface when the Category-5 hurricane ripped up trees in the area.

The fort site has been closed to the public because of the damage from the hurricane.

But “while we were reeling from the shock of the impact of the storm,” the site was listed under the National Park Service’s Underground Railroad Network to Freedom, which made the spot eligible for grants, said study researcher and archaeologist Rhonda Kimbrough, heritage program manager with the National Forests in Florida, part of the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Forest Service.
Soon after that, the Southeast Archeological Center, part of the National Park Service, in collaboration with the Forest Service, received a $15,000 grant to excavate the artifacts uprooted by the storm, as was first reported by the Tallahassee Democrat.
History of the “nexus of freedom”
“This site is really a pivotal point in our nation’s history,” Kimbrough said. It was the “nexus of freedom and slavery resistance.”
The fort, part of the Prospect Bluff Historic Sites in Florida, was built by the British during the War of 1812. Occupying the site were former slaves called Maroons, freed by their pledge of allegiance to the British military. But they lived alongside a mix of different cultures, including Red Stick Creeks (the anti-U.S. faction of a Native American tribe that had fled to the site after the Creek War of 1813-1814), a faction of Choctaw and other tribes, and, of course, the British.
For the next couple of years, at any given day, as many as 3,500 to 5,000 people were living there, Kimbrough told Live Science. But when the War of 1812 ended, the British left the fort at the helm of a former African American slave and left the area. Without the British settlers, the fort’s population fell significantly.

In 1816, U.S. forces attacked the fort. A week of fighting ended in devastation for the fort’s occupants when a single shot from the U.S. troops blew up the stash of ammunition, killing around 270 of the 320 people still living there, Kimbrough said. Those who didn’t die immediately later died from their injuries or at the hands of the U.S. forces.
“It was just devastating,” Kimbrough said. When you “have that kind of explosion from what had been a storehouse of military weaponry, you’re going to have stuff scattered everywhere, just everywhere.”

Root balls tangled up in history

Indeed, when Hurricane Michael uprooted around 100 of the site’s trees — mostly oaks and pines, with a few magnolias — the storm also uprooted musket balls and other military artillery. Tangled up in the mix were 19th-century European ceramics, such as blue-shell-edged pearlware, brown salt-blazed English ceramics, and majolica, a type of colorful Italian pottery.

Through a process called bioturbation, various organisms had, over the years, churned the soil and buried the artifacts deep in the ground.
The trees moved the artifacts around with their roots and blanketed the objects with leaves. Tortoises and other animals aided the process by burrowing holes, and humans did their part by trampling the grounds, logging and extracting turpentine. Even weather events, such as storms and winds, participated in the cover-up.
But now, archaeologists are trying to figure out which pieces belonged to which cultures. The researchers hope to eventually find a ceramic type or a cultural marker that they can use to say definitively whether an artifact comes from a maroon community, Kimbrough said.
Archaeologists are also comparing what they found and where they found it to historical records, including an 1815 map that depicts the locations of fortifications, houses, and other structures.
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Friday, May 3, 2019

A First for this Indian Subcontinent, ASI Excavation Leads to Discovery of 'Legged Coffins' (Photos)


by N. Morgan



Members of the Archeological Survey of India (ASI) have discovered two 'legged coffins' during an excavation in Sanauli in Baghpat district of Uttar Pradesh.

New Delhi: In a history-making achievement, the Archeological Survey of India (ASI) has unearthed two decorated 'legged coffins' during an excavation process in Baghpat district of Uttar Pradesh. Officials claim that this is the first of a kind discovery in the Indian subcontinent.



Furnaces, 'legged coffins' with skeletons were among the artifacts discovered by the team of ASI personnel.

The discovery was made during an excavation which commenced in 2018 with ASI's Institute of Archeology Director SK Manjul at the helm. The excavation at Sanauli in Baghpat district of Uttar Pradesh was carried out with the aim to better understand burial sites and rituals.

Sanauli is the same area where ASI personnel discovered the first Bronze Age 'chariots' to be recovered as the result of archeological excavation in South Asia.



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Director SK Manjul told The New Indian Express that the 'legged coffins' and other artifacts were discovered from the Ganga-Yamuna Doab region. He added that these articles such as weapons, chariots, and shields which have not been discovered in the Indian sub-continent prior to this.

Manjul also told the national daily that this excavation which began in January of this year and is being conducted at two locations will give archeologists a new dimension to better understand Vedic literature.

The official statement from ASI states that two burial pits and a sacred chamber of burnt brick were discovered in the first area. The further excavation led to the discovery of one wooden 'legged coffin' with steatite inlays having extended skeleton of a female, said the statement adding that traces of bone points, gold bead, and pottery systematically arranged towards north and eastern sides of the coffin was found in the burial pit.

Two big pots were also found placed under the coffin which is believed to have been used to store food and other organic remains associated with burial rituals.

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References:

http://bit.ly/2IWIPyp

https://www.outlookindia.com/website/story/asi-excavated-sanauli-chariots-have-potential-to-challenge-aryan-invasion-theory/312415

https://www.timesnownews.com/mirror-now/society/article/in-a-first-for-indian-subcontinent-asi-excavation-leads-to-discovery-of-legged-coffins/410911

Stories Contributed by N. Morgan

Wednesday, March 20, 2019

Archaeologists Didn't Believe Their Eyes When They Found This (Video)


In today’s world, there are new opportunities for new discoveries that keep appearing and as a result, these new findings are constantly happening. Archaeology also uses the latest achievements in technology to aid in their research..
However, some of these remarkable discoveries are made by just common every day, people. For example, a little girl found a real sword in a lake and that weapon is at least 1,000 years old!

 
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Monday, July 24, 2017

Amazing Tattooed Mummy Brought Back to Life in Stunning Realistic Recreation (Video)




by N.Morgan
What killed Señora of Cao in Peru 1,600 years ago may still remain a mystery, however we now have a very clear depiction of what she looked like alive.
No one knows what fatal fate of Señora of Cao nearly 1,600 years ago.
Whatever the cause of her demise, her untimely passing must have been upsetting to her people, the Moche, who lived on the north coast of Peru between approximately and 100 and 700 C.E., at least seven centuries before the more well-known Inca.
#history #science

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Saturday, June 27, 2015

Ancient Antikythera Shipwreck Has More Secrets To Reveal







Researchers are carrying out a new five-year study of the ancient Greek shipwreck off Antikythera Island that had onboard the famous Antikythera mechanism, hailed as the world's first computing device, as well as other treasures.

A recent analysis of the wreck identified two areas with artifacts and ship remnants, leading archaeologists to believe that there may have been another ship that went down simultaneously. Alternatively, the two areas of remnants may be separate parts of the Antikythera wreck after it split in two.

Greek officials approved the extension of studies of the ancient vessel, which may have been 50 meters (164 feet) long. Researchers are expecting to find more treasures from the ship, which is located at the bottom of  the Aegean Sea, in the south of Greece.

This time they will focus on areas where they've found metal objects and pottery in the past.

“The evidence shows this is the largest ancient shipwreck ever discovered,” Brendan Foley of Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute has said. “It's the Titanic of the ancient world.”

More http://bit.ly/1RGa8WO



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Oldest Wooden Statue In The World: The 10,000-Year-Old Shigir Idol







The Shigir Idol is considered to be one of the most important and mysterious pieces of pre-historic art from ancient Europe.

The ancient wooden carving, which today sits in a museum in Russia, has been dated at nearly 10,000 years old, making it 4,000 to 5,000 years older than Britain’s famous Stonehenge monument and twice as old as the Egyptian pyramids.

Not only is it the oldest wooden statue in the world, but standing as tall as a two-story building, it is also the highest wooden statue from the ancient world.

Covered with strange markings and geometric symbols, some researchers believe this carving contains coded information about the creation of the world left behind by man from the Mesolithic era.

Discovery of the Shigir Idol

The Shigir Idol was discovered in January 1890 in the Sverdlovsk region, in the western fringes of Siberia, Russia.

It was preserved, as if in a time capsule, about 4 meters (13.5 feet) below the surface, and protected through the millennia by a layer of peat bog on the site of an open air gold mine.

  Its survival was due to the anti-bacterial effects of the peat, which prevented it from rotting.

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Thursday, May 28, 2015

Extraordinary Drone Footage Of Sudan’s Mysterious Nubian Pyramids 





The most famous pyramids are those of Egypt, however, thousands of kilometers further south along the Nile stands another impressive group of ancient structures, which have survived in the Sudanese desert for the past 3,000 years.

 And thanks to this new drone footage captured by National Geographic, we’re finally able to get some insight into the sheer scale of these incredible and little-studied pyramids.

Constructed by the Nubian civilization, there are about 255 of these mystic and beautiful pyramids in 3 known spots scattered across the Sudanese desert, but most tourists never see these wonders or are even aware of their existence.

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Wednesday, May 27, 2015

Biblioteca Nazionale Marciana: A Treasure Trove Of Ancient Manuscripts 





The main public square of the Italian city of Venice is the Piazza San Marco (St. Mark’s Square).

Around this square are some of the most recognizable buildings in Venice.The most famous of these are the Basilica Cattedrale Patriarcale di San Marco (St. Mark’s Basilica) and its iconic bell tower, the Campanile di San Marco (St. Mark’s Campanile).

 As St. Mark is the patron saint of the city, it is little wonder that many of the public buildings in Venice are named after him. Another building on the Piazza San Marco named after the city’s patron saint is the Biblioteca Nazionale Marciana (the National Library of St. Mark’s).  

The Biblioteca Marciana is located at the end of the Piazza San Marco, and separated from the Palazzo Ducale (Doge’s Palace) by the Piazzetta San Marco. This building, which symbolizes the city’s wealth and tradition of public investment in intellectual and artistic pursuits, was designed by the Italian architect, Jacopo Sansovino.

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The Ancient Egyptian Civilization, Thousands Of Years Older Than Previously Thought  




Some evidence casts doubt on the actual chronology of Egyptian pharaohs.

The Turin King List, also known as the Turin Royal Canon, raises many questions that science does not seem to accept. Despite attempts at reconstruction, approximately 50% of the papyrus remains missing. This papyrus as presently constituted is 1.7 m long and 0.41 m wide, broken into over 160 fragments.

The Egyptian hieratic papyrus thought to date from the reign of Pharaoh Ramesses II contradicts the established dates and chronologies on the Egyptian world. Researchers are coming across great amount of information which suggests that Egypt is much older than what archaeology and history are telling us.

 The Turin King List is currently located over 3000 kilometers from the land of the Pharaohs, deposited in the Egyptian museum in Turin, Italy. It was discovered in 1822 by Bernardino Drovetti in the ancient Egyptian capital of Thebes. The list was translated by Jean-François Champollion, known primarily as the decipherer of the Egyptian hieroglyphs and a founding figure in the field of Egyptology.

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Tuesday, May 26, 2015

The Grand And Sacred Temple Of Artemis, A Wonder Of The Ancient World 





The temple of Artemis is one of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World.

Three to four times as large as the Parthenon in Athens, it was once described as the largest temple and building of antiquity and served as a place of worship to the Greek Goddess Artemis.

Home to both Greeks and Romans, the grand temple was destroyed and rebuilt many times over the course of its long history.

The Antipater of Sidon, who compiled and visited all the seven wonders, said the temple was more marvelous than any of the other six wonders:

I have gazed on the walls of impregnable Babylon along which chariots may race, and on the Zeus by the banks of the Alpheus, I have seen the hanging gardens, and the Colossus of the Helios, the great man-made mountains of the lofty pyramids, and the gigantic tomb of Mausolus; but when I saw the sacred house of Artemis that towers to the clouds, the others were placed in the shade, for the sun himself has never looked upon its equal outside Olympus.

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Decapitation Discovery Reveals Gruesome Practices Of The Ancient Incas 




In the Andes region, in Bolivia, on the shores of Lake Titicaca archaeologists have recently made a distinctly gruesome discovery at a site known as Wata Wata, in the form of three decapitated heads.

The heads belong to one male and two female adults, all of whom had suffered considerable violence as part of an act of execution, around the time of death or after it.

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Sunday, May 24, 2015

The Ancient Site Of Takht-E Soleyman: Iran’s Throne Of King Solomon 




Between the 3rd and 7th centuries AD, the country now named Iran was part of the Sasanian Empire, Rome’s great rival in the East. Under this empire, Zoroastrianism was recognized as the state religion, and numerous Zoroastrian sanctuaries were built by the Sasanian rulers as a sign of their piety.

One of the most important of these sanctuaries is found at a site known as Takht-e-Soleyman.

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Aboriginal Languages Could Reveal Scientific Clues To Australia’s Unique Past 




The loss of Australian aboriginal languages could obstruct access to unique scientific information regarding Australia’s ancient geological history, according to a story reported this week by BBC News.

Ancient Australian aboriginal legends passed down over millennia appear to verify recent scientific discoveries regarding Australia’s ancient past. For example, cave art suggests an ancient knowledge of the heavens including beliefs in visits by ancient astronauts and a previously untapped record of natural history among the stars.

Investigation of such a resource could reveal memories of ancient meteor strikes from thousands of years ago according to research by the University of New South Wales (UNSW).

More http://bit.ly/1ISKRcf 



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3.3-Million-Year-Old Stone Tools Overturn Archaeological Record, Predate Early Humans 



Our human ancestors may not have been the first to spearhead new technologies millions of years ago. It would seem other hominins were crafting tools 700,000 years before previously thought.

 A paper published this week in the journal Nature announces that the oldest stone tools found to date were crafted by proto-humans, marking “a new beginning to the known archaeological record.”

Lead study author Sonia Harmand of the Turkana Basin Institute at Stony Brook University says that the tools, “shed light on an unexpected and previously unknown period of hominin behavior and can tell us a lot about cognitive development in our ancestors that we can't understand from fossils alone,” according to science news site Phys.org.

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Saturday, May 23, 2015

The Surprising And Iconic Bronze Age Egtved Girl: Teenage Remains Tell A Story Of Trade And Travel 




One of the best-known Danish Bronze-Age burials, the well preserved Egtved Girl was found in a barrow in 1921. Her woolen clothing, hair, and nails were perfectly preserved, but all her bones were missing.

Scientists studying the ancient teenager’s remains have now made the surprising discovery that the Egtved Girl traveled great distances before her death, and wasn’t from Denmark at all.

A study has been published in the journal Nature detailing the results of modern tests done by scientists. Strontium isotope analysis on Egtved Girl’s molar, hair, and fingernails, combined with examination of her distinctive woolen clothing, have revealed she was born and raised hundreds of miles from her burial site in Egtved, in modern Denmark.

 Findings now show she likely came from The Black Forest of South West Germany, and she traveled between the two locations via ship frequently in the last two years of her life.

More http://bit.ly/1PEq7ZA



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Great Salt Lake Of Utah Gives Up Its Prehistoric Gambling Secrets From The 13th Century 





Hundreds of gambling implements, including dice, hoops, carved sticks and other items, have been found in a cave on the shore of the Great Salt Lake, known simply as ‘Cave 1’, according to a report by Science and News website Western Digs.

The items were used in games of skill and chance and archaeologists believe there may be more than 10,000 other implements still to be found. If so, it will be the largest collection of ancient gambling artifacts ever discovered in the western US.

The items, along with artifacts from previous explorations, are currently being studied by archaeologists from the University of Alberta and Brigham Young University.

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Emerald Tablets Of Thoth, 50,000 Year Old Tablets Reportedly From Atlantis 




The Tablets of Thoth are imperishable, resistant to all elements, corrosion and acids. In effect, the atomic and cellular structure is fixed, and no change can take place, thus violating the material law of ionization, according to Bibliotecapleyades.

Upon them are engraved characters in the Ancient Atlantean language; characters which respond to the attuned thought waves of the reader and which release much more wisdom and information than the characters do when merely deciphered. The Tablets are fastened together with hoops of a golden colored alloy suspended from a rod of the same material.

Dr. M. Doreal has translated this Work, and has published through the Brotherhood of the White Temple, a translation of ten of these twelve Tablets. He has divided the ten into thirteen parts for the sake of convenience. The last two Tablets are found in the “Interpretation of The Emerald Tablets”, also by Dr. Doreal.

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Thursday, May 21, 2015

Discovery Of Ancient Indian Daggers May Push Back Start Of Iron Age By Hundreds Of Years 




Indian archaeologists say recent dagger discoveries at ancient sites in Hyderabad have pushed the Iron Age in India back to at least 2200 BC—around 1,000 years before the rest of the world. Indian scholars had previously estimated an earlier date for India’s Iron Age than other parts of the world by about 600 years.

The Times of India reports that archaeologists at the University of Hyderabad campus have found small blades and knives that they dated to between 2400 and 1800 BC. They were excavated next to earthen pots, most of which were mangled. About 10 of the pots were in good enough condition for archaeologists to learn somewhat about the art of that time and place.

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