Revealed: face of 75,000-year-old female Neanderthal from cave where species buried their dead
Archaeology News Report
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2d ago
  Reports and Proceedings UNIVERSITY OF CAMBRIDGE   IMAGE:  THE SKULL OF SHANIDAR Z, WHICH HAS BEEN RECONSTRUCTED IN THE LAB AT THE UNIVERSITY OF CAMBRIDGE. view more  CREDIT: BBC STUDIOS/JAMIE SIMONDS A new Netflix documentary has recreated the face of a 75,000-year-old female Neanderthal whose flattened skull was discovered and rebuilt from hundreds of bone fragments by a team of archaeologists and conservators led by the University of Cambridge. The team excavated the female Neanderthal in 2018 from inside a cave in Iraqi Kurdistan where the species had repeatedly ..read more
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Revised dating of the Liujiang skeleton renews understanding of human occupation of China
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2d ago
Peer-Reviewed Publication   IMAGE:  LOCATION OF TONGTIANYAN CAVE (LIUJIANG) IN GUANGXI PROVINCE, SOUTHERN CHINA, TOGETHER WITH THE LOCATION OF OTHER KEY FOSSILS OF HOMO SAPIENS IN CHINA. FRONTAL VIEW OF THE LIUJIANG CRANIAL AND POSTCRANIAL ELEMENTS. view more  CREDIT: SPRINGER NATURE The emergence of Homo sapiens in Eastern Asia has long been a subject of intense research interest, with the scarcity of well-preserved and dated human fossils posing significant challenges.   Tongtianyan cave, located in the Liujiang District of Liuzhou City, Southern Ch ..read more
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6800 years ago: a long-distance cultural exchange between the Tibetan plateau and northern China
Archaeology News Report
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4d ago
 The Tibetan plateau—the world’s highest and largest plateau—poses a challenge to the people who live there because of its extreme climate. In a new study, researchers have discovered stone artifacts that suggest that there were more cultural exchanges between those who lived on the plateau and those living on its perimeter. “The Tibetan plateau has an average elevation of more than 4500 meters, which makes Colorado seem like it is at sea level. It’s amazing that people have been able to occupy this area on and off for at least the last 40,000 years,” said Stanley Ambrose (MME), a profess ..read more
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Ancient Maya blessed their ballcourts
Archaeology News Report
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6d ago
  Researchers find evidence of ceremonial offerings beneath ballcourt in Mexico   IMAGE:  UNIVERSITY OF CINCINNATI PROFESSOR DAVID LENTZ HOLDS UP A REPRODUCTION TILE FEATURING ANCIENT MAYA GLYPHS. RESEARCHERS DISCOVERED EVIDENCE OF CEREMONIAL OFFERINGS AT THE SITE OF AN ANCIENT MAYA BALLCOURT IN YAXNOHCAH, MEXICO. view more  CREDIT: ANDREW HIGLEY For sports fans, places like Fenway Park, Wembley Stadium or Wimbledon's Centre Court are practically hallowed ground. Archaeologists at the University of Cincinnati found evidence of similar reverence at ballcourts built b ..read more
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Forgotten city:” the identification of Dura-Europos’ neglected sister site in Syria
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1w ago
  Peer-Reviewed Publication The Dura-Europos site in modern-day Syria is famous for its exceptional state of preservation. Like Pompeii, this ancient city has yielded many great discoveries, and serves as a window into the world of the ancient Hellenistic, Parthian, and Roman periods. Yet despite the prominence of Dura-Europos in Near Eastern scholarship, there is another city, only some miles down the Euphrates river, that presents a long-neglected opportunity for study. A new paper in the Journal of Near Eastern Studies, entitled "The Ancient City of Giddan/Eddana (Anqa, Ira ..read more
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Humans occupied a lava tube in Saudi Arabia for thousands of years
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2w ago
Bones and artifacts indicate a timeline of herding and agriculture in northern Arabia Peer-Reviewed Publication PLOS   IMAGE:  RESEARCHERS EXPLORING THE UMM JIRSAN LAVA TUBE SYSTEM. view more  CREDIT: PALAEODESERTS PROJECT, CC-BY 4.0 (HTTPS://CREATIVECOMMONS.ORG/LICENSES/BY/4.0/) A large lava tube in Saudia Arabia provided valuable shelter for humans herding livestock over at least the past 7,000 years, according to a study published April 17, 2024 in the open-access journal PLOS ONE by Mathew Stewart of Griffith University, Brisbane and colleagues. Research in ..read more
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The resettlement history of the Iron-Age metropolis of Hazor in Israel
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2w ago
  IMAGE:  DURING THE BRONZE AGE, HAZOR WAS ONE OF THE LARGEST CITIES IN THE REGION. THE SETTLEMENT MOUND IS LOCATED IN THE NORTH OF ISRAEL. view more  CREDIT: MARYAM MATTA The early origins of the Israelites are at the centre of a new research project at the University of Oldenburg, Germany. A team of researchers led by Hebrew Bible scholar and archaeologist Prof. Dr Benedikt Hensel will explore over a three-year period how one of the largest “megacities” of the Bronze Age in the eastern Mediterranean was abandoned and then resettled over centuries – and how the narr ..read more
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1,500 Indigenous Australian message sticks analyzed
Archaeology News Report
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3w ago
 Indigenous Australian message sticks, which feature markings to convey messages over long distances, analyzed for first time at scale through new database of 1,500 artifacts ### Article URL:  https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0299712 ..read more
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Pacific cities much older than previously thought
Archaeology News Report
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3w ago
    IMAGE:  A VIEW OF THE URBAN AREA AT MU‘A.  view more  CREDIT: CREDIT: PHILLIP PARTON/ANU. New evidence of one of the first cities in the Pacific shows they were established much earlier than previously thought, according to new research from The Australian National University (ANU).   The study used aerial laser scanning to map archaeological sites on the island of Tongatapu in Tonga.   Lead author, PhD scholar Phillip Parton, said the new timeline also indicates that urbanisation in the Pacific was an indigenous innovation that developed ..read more
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Experimental collaboration highlights the prevalence of equifinality in archaeological interpretation
Archaeology News Report
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3w ago
    IMAGE:  CLOVIS FLUTED POINTS HAFTED ONTO WOODEN HANDLES BY MICHAEL WILSON. (IMAGES CREDIT: METIN I. EREN) view more  CREDIT: METIN I. EREN Kent State University’s experimental archaeologists, along with those from several other universities, joined forces with the popular hunting, outdoors, and conservation media platform, MeatEater, Inc., for a unique animal processing experiment, shedding new light on ancient stone knives and showcasing the importance of testing and looking for equifinality.  ‘Equifinality’ is when two or more distinct processes can lead to ..read more
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