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News Archive
Archaeologists uncover further evidence of Nobber' s medieval past
May, 24 2009

Meath Chronicle

Archaeological director Alan Hayden at a corn-drying kiln on the site where the Nobber GFC juvenile football pitch will be located. Evidence of activity from the eras of late Bronze Age to the Early Medieval Age has been established as a result of archaeological excavations which have just concluded at the site where the new Nobber GFC juvenile pitch will be built.


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Confederate cannon research in Florence County starts today
May, 24 2009

South Carolina Now

Archaeologists from the University of South Carolina will begin work to map the Mars Bluff Naval Yard and locate and raise three large Confederate cannons from the Pee Dee River today.


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U.S. and Polish archaeologists successful at Berenike
May, 24 2009

Polish Press Agency

U.S. and Polish archaeologists successful at BerenikeFragments of pottery with inscriptions in one of pre-Islamic languages have been found by a U.S-Polish team of archaeologists near Berenike, a Greco-Roman harbour on the Egyptian Red Sea coast.


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Cliff erosion on Golden Cap estate exposes Bronze Age settlement
May, 24 2009

Bridport News

ARCHAEOLGOISTS working on the National Trust' s Golden Cap Estate have uncovered a rare find  a Neolithic settlement exposed by cliff erosion.


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Tests could link skull to 1857 Utah massacre
May, 24 2009

KTAK

For decades it sat on a shelf in a brown cardboard box - a skull pierced in the back with an apparent bullet hole and linked by a typewritten note to a dark and violent chapter in Mormon church history.


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New finds in Alexandria span time
May, 24 2009

Al Ahram Weekly

Clockwise from above: the marble statue; the shaft leading to tombs; workers remove the dust; a collection of smoking pipes, medicine tools, coins and arrows An incomplete Graeco-Roman statue of an athlete in Alexandria and an enormous collection of prehistoric artefacts in Fayoum are the most recent discoveries in Egypt, Nevine El-Aref reports


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Calling the Queen Nefertiti's Authenticity into Question
May, 24 2009

Spiegel Online International

Swiss art historian Henri Stierlin claims that Nefertiti's statue was actually made by archaeologists to display an ancient necklace. The paucity of organic material on the bust makes it difficult to date it using carbon-dating techniques. For decades, people have marvelled at the bust of Nefertiti. Now, some scholars say it's a fake -- made to hold a necklace. Museum scientists are eager to prove these theories wrong, but the mysterious statue might not be ready to reveal her secrets yet.


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Mystery footprints restore warring scene
May, 24 2009

China.org

Newly discovered footprints of different sizes, apparently left by men, women and children, on an ancient military route, have helped recreate a war scene that occurred at least 2,000 years ago, an archaeologist said Friday.


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More on Ida fossile: Origin of the Specious
May, 24 2009

Times Online

Ida, an early primate that roamed part of Germany 47m years agoIda the fossil was hailed as the  missing link' in our evolution. Don' t believe the hype. For Sir David Attenborough there was no doubt.  The link until now was missing. Well, it is no longer missing, he announced last week.


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Zhou dynasty site emerges in S. China
May, 24 2009

CCTV

In South China's coastal province of Guangdong, a new archeological discovery is shedding light on the history of local pottery-making.In South China's coastal province of Guangdong, a new archeological discovery is shedding light on the history of local pottery-making. Now let's go to the Xinhui prefecture to take a look.


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