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News Archive
More early dwellings at Ocmulgee monument site, archaeologist finds
December, 13 2010

Macon

Archeologist Daniel Bigman looks at a compass while lining up a grid at the Ocmulgee National Monument Sunday.An ancient civilization of mound builders who lived near the Ocmulgee River just northeast of what is now downtown Macon may have been home to more native people than originally thought.


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Rare Native American birch bark canoe found in Cornwall
December, 13 2010

BBC

The canoe will be on display in Falmouth from the end of January until SeptemberA rare Native American canoe thought to be more than 250 years old has been found on a family estate in Cornwall.


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2,400 year old soup found in NW China
December, 13 2010

China Daily

Archaeologist Liu Daiyun extracts an animal bone from the soup contained in a 2,400-year-old bronze tripod unearthed in an ancient tomb in Xi'an, capital of Northwest China's Shaanxi province, Dec 10, 2010Bone soup made in a bronze tripod 2,400 years ago was discovered in an ancient tomb in Xi'an, capital of Northwest China's Shaanxi province, the Provincial Archaeological Institute announced on Saturday.


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Roman Military Fort at the Port of Sanitja
December, 13 2010

Past Horizons

1st century B.C. bronze arrowhead from CreteTitus Livius narrated the events of the Roman Conquest of the Balearic Islands in his work Ad Urbe Condita. However, details on the great victory of Roman General Quintus Caecilius Metellus, when he reached Rome after conquering the islands, which served as his base from 123 to 121 BC, are lacking and only a few general descriptions survived.


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Excavations in Georgia
December, 13 2010

Past Horizons

Excavating a Byzantine grave containing a young male, aged approx. twenty years oldThe village of Nokalakevi stands along the Senaki to Martvili road in Mingrelia in western Georgia where it crosses the River Tekhuri, emerging from the Caucasus mountains onto the great plain of Colchis.


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Why Frome is still cashing in on the Romans
December, 13 2010

Guardian UK

Some of the Roman coins found in a field near FromeLast April, a man who hated history at school unearthed the largest coin hoard ever found in Britain. But why had it been buried in a field in Somerset?


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Woodhenge: Is this one of the greatest discoveries of archaeology or a simple farmers fence?
December, 13 2010

Daily Mail

Circle of confusion: An artist's impression of how Woodhenge may have been 5,000 years agoThe discovery of a wooden version of Stonehenge a few hundred yards from the famous monument was hailed as one of the most important archaeological finds for decades.


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Buried in Perus Desert, Fossils Draw Smugglers
December, 13 2010

New York Times

Mario Urbina-Schmitt, a fossil hunter who works for paleontologists, rested next to a fossilized skeleton in the Ocucaje Desert last monthNestled between the Andes and the Pacific, the sparse desert surrounding this outpost in southern Peru looks like one of the world's most desolate areas. Barren mountains rise from windswept valleys. Dust devils dance from one dune to the next.


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Mexican Archaeologists Say Tonina Ballgame Court may Be the One Described in Popol Vuh
December, 13 2010

Art Daily

Ballgame court in the archaeological zone of ToninaThe recent finding of 2 sculptures with the shape of a serpent's head that 1,500 years ago were part of the Ballgame at the Maya city of Tonina, Chiapas today, were found by archaeologists of the National Institute of Anthropology and History (INAH).


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Pre Hellenistic Temple Discovered in Southern Syria
December, 13 2010

Global Arab Network

Ballgame court in the archaeological zone of ToninaStone stairs and the foundations of a temple built on the ruins of an older temple from the pre Hellenistic period were unearthed at the site of Tal Ahmar in Sweida province, Global Arab Network reports according to archaeological sources.


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