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News Archive
Ancient wrecks being hunted in once forbidden sea off Albania
January, 29 2009

Owen Sound Sun Times

Once Europe's most forbidding coast, this sparkling stretch of the Ionian Sea is slowly revealing lost treasures that date back 2,500 years and shipwrecks from ancient times.


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Canada's Stonehenge: scientist says Alberta sun temple has 5,000-year-old calendar
January, 29 2009

The Canadian Press

An academic maverick is challenging conventional wisdom on Canada's prehistory by claiming an archeological site in southern Alberta is really a vast, open-air sun temple with a precise 5,000-year-old calendar predating England's Stonehenge and Egypt's pyramids.


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Digs may help decide if King Solomon's mines was a misnomer
January, 29 2009

The Jerusalem Post

A University of California archeologist has found evidence that sheds new light on the venerable question of whether King David and his son King Solomon controlled the copper industry in the Kingdom of Edom, which is present-day southern Jordan.


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Child's skeleton found in Burnt City
January, 28 2009

Press TV

The burnt skeleton of the child Iranian archeologists have discovered a child's fire-consumed skeleton in the Burnt City in southeastern province of Sistan-Baluchestan.


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Druids in row over boy's skeleton
January, 28 2009

BBC

The skeleton, known as A decision is due to be made over the future of a skeleton found near an ancient stone circle 80 years ago.


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Medieval find in Northampton's Gold Street
January, 28 2009

Northampton Chronicle & Echo

Gold Street development unearths finds of significant archaeological interest. Pictured is Councillr Jean HawkinsMajor roadworks in the centre of Northampton have given shoppers a glimpse into the town's medieval past as well as providing evidence of the historic shoe trade.


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Prehistoric wounds reveal Triceratops combat
January, 28 2009

Cosmos, Australia

Clash of the titans: Artist s reconstruction of Triceratops in horn-to-horn combat. A new study provides evidence that some Triceratops suffered injuries as a result of these fights.A new study of battle wounds inflicted upon the dinosaur Triceratops is the best evidence yet that their frills and horns were used for violence as well as display.


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Finnish researchers dig through millennia in the Valley of the Kings
January, 28 2009

Universitas Helsingiensis

Finnish researchers dig through millennia in the Valley of the KingsDocent Jaana Toivari-Viitala heads the first-ever research project managed by Finns in Egypt.


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Surprise discovery after dig into past
January, 27 2009

Cambridge Evening News

The site of a cemetery was found during the dig at Addenbrooke's Hospital during six months of excavations.PREHISTORIC Cambridge may have been a far bigger settlement than previously thought.


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Turkish expert rebuilds faces for ancient skulls
January, 27 2009

Hurriyet

Sadi Cagd1r, a forensic medical expert, put a face back on to a skull from the antique city of Metropolis with the technique of facial reconstruction, after reassembling the pieces of the broken skull. 'It is the first facial reconstruction to be undertaken in Turkey at an excavation site,' he says.


Full Story...
 
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