Archaeology Magazine

@archaeologymag

A publication of the Archaeological Institute of America. Features & daily news, plus live reports from editors in the field.

Tilmeldt februar 2009

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  1. for 14 timer siden

    Possible Cause of Aztec Illness Identified

    Fortryd
  2. for 15 timer siden

    Limestone walls uncovered in Galway, Ireland during the restoration of a fifteenth-century manor house may be part of a castle built in 1232.

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  3. for 15 timer siden

    DNA Analysis Reveals Mummies’ Familial Relationship

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  4. for 16 timer siden

    Traces of Medieval Castle Uncovered in Ireland

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  5. for 16 timer siden

    Researchers say they have eliminated smallpox, measles, mumps, and influenza as culprits for Mexico's 1545-50 epidemic, which killed as many as 15 million people, presenting evidence that a disease caused by salmonella enterica bacteria was to blame.

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  6. for 19 timer siden

    in 27 B.C., Augustus began his reign as the first Roman Emperor. Recently, archaeologists have investigated Augustus's impact on the architecture of Rome, which he claimed to have inherited as a city of mudbrick and left a city of marble.

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  7. for 20 timer siden

    The earliest known set of large-scale Egyptian hieroglyphs equating a pharaoh’s authority with control over the cosmos is one of ARCHAEOLOGY’s Top 10 Discoveries of 2017

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  8. 15. jan.

    in 1535, Henry VIII declared himself head of the Church of England. Archaeologists working at London's Old Royal Naval College uncovered remains of Greenwich Palace, which was razed in the 17th century and said to be Henry's favorite residence.

    Fortryd
  9. 15. jan.

    Click here to see a 3-D walkthrough of the remains of a Norwegian plant the Germans used to produce heavy water during WWII. In February 1943, the Allies bombed the plant, crippling the Germans’ nuclear weapons program.

    Fortryd
  10. 14. jan.

    The Aztec burial of a sacrificed wolf decorated with gold ornaments as if it were symbolizing a human warrior is one of ARCHAEOLOGY’s Top 10 Discoveries of 2017

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  11. 13. jan.

    ARCHAEOLOGY's editors announce their picks for the year’s Top 10 Discoveries, including the uncovering of USS Indianapolis, 72 years after it was downed by torpedoes fired from a Japanese submarine

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  12. 12. jan.

    An apparently undisturbed kurgan, or burial mound, which is thought to be around 3,000 years old and may hold the tomb of a Scythian prince, has been discovered in southern Siberia.

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  13. 12. jan.

    A broch, or roundhouse, discovered in Scotland's Comar Wood, Inverness, has been dated to 2,400 years ago and is thought to have been the home of a local chief or lord.

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  14. 12. jan.

    Ancient Fortress Investigated in the Scottish Highlands

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  15. 12. jan.

    Possible Scythian Tomb Found in Siberia

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  16. 12. jan.

    Dendrochronological evidence suggests the Norse developed an urban center in Cork, Ireland beginning around A.D. 1070, about 15 years before they arrived in County Waterford, which is better known for its Viking presence.

    Fortryd
  17. 12. jan.

    New Dates for Viking Center in Ireland

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  18. 12. jan.

    A small pottery fragment from a bowl thought to have been produced in China sometime between 300 B.C. and A.D. 300 has been discovered at Japan's Karakami archaeological site on an island off the coast of Kyushu.

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  19. 12. jan.

    As the Trans Adriatic Pipeline cuts its way through the Balkans, archaeologists in Albania are grabbing every opportunity to expose the country’s history—including this site, which was home to buildings dating from the 6th-century A.D. to the Ottoman era

    Fortryd
  20. 11. jan.

    Two chambers thought to have been used for elite Moche political ceremonies some 1,500 years ago have been found at the Limon archaeological complex in Peru's Lambayeque Region.

    Fortryd

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