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News Archive
Worlds oldest palace Aslantepe Tumulus in Turkey to be open air museum
September, 03 2010

World Bulletin

The oldest palace of the world which is in Aslantepe Tumulus dated back to 5,000 B.C. in eastern province of Malatya will become an open air museum.


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Painted ceramics discovered during excavations at Godedzor
September, 03 2010

Aysor

A huge number of fragments of painted ceramics has been discovered during archaeological excavation at the place of Godedzor near Angeghakot village of Syunik province of Armenia. The ceramics of such kind were also found and are paralleled to findings at South and Northern Mesopotamia.


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Carnforth historian finds hoard of Roman coins near Arnside
September, 03 2010

Westmorland Gazette

BURIED TREASURE: Historian John Harrison with his metal detector A METAL detecting historian has made an exciting discovery of rare Roman coins at a South Lakeland caravan park.


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Hodder Cleans House at Famed Catalhoyuk Dig
September, 03 2010

Science AAAS

Seeking new blood. Archaeologist Ian Hodder (left holding figurine) has asked his leading scientific specialists to step down. Researchers finishing the dig season at Turkey's Catalhoyuk a 9500 year old site famed for its art and symbolism at the dawn of agriculture got a big shock last week.


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Rockies fossils yield 8 new species
September, 03 2010

CBC

Park by Royal Ontario Museum paleontologists. Stanleycaris, named after the glacier, was a primitive arthropod, a group of jointed-legged animals that includes insects, spiders and crabs. The claw is about three centimetres long and the entire animal was probably less than 20 centimetres in size. It lived about 505 million years ago in the Middle Cambrian period, when British Columbia was under a tropical seaA surprise fossil field at a glacier in B.C.'s Kootenay National Park contains at least eight new species that lived 505 million years ago.


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Researchers: Williamsburg colonists buried pets
September, 03 2010

Washington Post

the Colonial-era dog gravesA finding from the College of William and Mary may change attitudes about how colonists treated their pets.


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Royals discovered predating the Incas
September, 02 2010

3News

The historically significant find was discovered by Peru's Walter Alva who had previously discovered the tomb of the Great Lord of SipanPeruvian archaeologists have discovered the remains of three ancient elites believed to have been buried more than 1,600 years ago in northern Peru.


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Scalpels and skulls point to Bronze Age brain surgery
September, 02 2010

New Scientist

Sophisticated skull surgery Onder Bilgi talks about his discovery of a razor sharp 4000 year old scalpel and what it was originally used for


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Petroglyphs Vandalized in Arizona
September, 02 2010

Williams Grand Canyon News

Petroglyphs located at Keyhole Sink on the Kaibab National Forest sit under fresh graffitti reported Aug. 26.A hiker reported Aug. 26 that vandals defaced the main rock art panel at Keyhole Sink on the Kaibab National Forest. Keyhole Sink is a popular interpretive site open to the public and visited by many.


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Giant Freeze Dryer To Preserve Ship Pieces At Texas A and M Lab
September, 02 2010

Texas A and M News

Freeze dryer entranceTexas A&M University researchers working to restore the hull of La Belle, a light frigate recovered from its underwater grave, are using an unconventional method to preserve the pieces: a state of the art freeze dryer big enough to hold a few head of cattle.


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