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Friday, 10 October 2014

Riace Bronzes 'can't be moved' for Milan Expo 2015


Rome, October 8 - The Italian culture ministry on Wednesday said the two world-famous ancient Greek warrior statues called the Riace Bronzes cannot be moved from Calabria to Milan for next year's Expo world's fair. "This puts an end to the debate", it said.

    The debate over the possible temporary transfer of the unique 2,500-year-old statues has been raging for months.

    Art critic, polemicist and Expo cultural envoy Vittorio Sgarbi led the campaign for the move, arguing they should be at Milan Expo 2015 as a symbol of Italian excellence despite long-stated resistance from Calabrian officials and conservation experts.

    Regional authorities have allowed the famed bronzes to tour the country just once, in 1981, to sold-out venues in Rome, Venice, and Milan, a tour in which the statues were seen by over one million people overall.

    Culture Minister Dario Franceschini set up a committee of scientific experts on September 8 to study what the impact would be if the statues were moved north from their home in the Reggio Calabria archaeology museum.

    Heading the committee was Giuliano Volpe, a professor of archaeology at the university of Foggia.
On September 4 Italian Premier Matteo Renzi said moving the ancient Greek warrior statues for next year's Expo made no sense.

 "Why move them when I should be taking visitors from Milan to Reggio?" said Renzi.

    However, the premier said he was not generally hostile to the idea of moving works of art.The bronzes spent four years stuck in bureaucratic red tape awaiting restoration and were returned for public display at Reggio Calabria's national archeological museum in December 2013.

    Calabria has historically kept a tight grip on the much-loved statues since their discovery by a diver in 1972. The exceedingly rare bronzes stand two metres tall and are an exceptionally realistic rendering of warriors or gods. Both are naked, with silver lashes and teeth, copper red lips and nipples, and eyes made of ivory, limestone, and a glass and amber paste.
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Wednesday, 8 October 2014

6,500-Year-Old Skeleton Archaeology in the Penn Museum


Philadelphia, PA Summer 2014— Sometimes the best archaeological discoveries aren’t made in the field. Scientists at the Penn Museum in Philadelphia have re-discovered an important find in their own storage rooms, a complete human skeleton about 6,500 years old. The mystery skeleton had been stored in a coffin-like box for 85 years, all trace of its identifying documentation gone. This summer, a project to digitize old records from a world-famous excavation brought that documentation, and the history of the skeleton, back to light.

Unearthed in 1929–30 by Sir Leonard Woolley’s joint Penn Museum/British Museum excavation team at the site of Ur in what is now southern Iraq, the skeleton is about 2,000 years older than the materials and remains found in the famous Mesopotamian “royal tombs,” the focus of a Penn Museum signature exhibition, Iraq’s Ancient Past: Rediscovering Ur’s Royal Cemetery. According to Dr. Janet Monge, Curator-in-Charge, Physical Anthropology Section of the Penn Museum, a visual examination of the skeleton indicates it is that of a once well-muscled male, about age 50 or older. Buried fully extended with arms at his sides and hands over his abdomen, he would have stood 5’ 8” to 5’ 10” tall.

Skeletons from this time in the ancient Near East, known as the Ubaid period (roughly 5500–4000 BCE) are extremely rare; complete skeletons from this period are even rarer. Woolley’s team excavated 48 graves in an early, Ubaid-era flood plain, nearly 50 feet below the surface of the site; of those, Woolley determined that only one skeleton was in condition to recover: the skeleton that has now been identified in the Penn Museum’s collection. He coated the bones and surrounding soil in wax and shipped the entire skeleton to London, then on to Philadelphia.

Today’s scientific techniques, unavailable in Woolley’s time, may provide new information about diet, ancestral origins, trauma, stress, and diseases of this poorly understood population.

A Mystery Solved


Dr. Monge had long known about the particular skeleton in the basement—one of about 2,000 complete human skeletons in the Museum collection, which houses, altogether, more than 150,000 bone specimens from throughout human history. For as long as she had been a Keeper or Curator, it had been there—a curious mystery, in an old wooden box with no catalog card, no identifying number, nothing to explain its former whereabouts.

In 2012, a new project began to digitize records from the 1922–1934 excavations at Ur. The project, Ur of the Chaldees: A Virtual Vision of Woolley’s Excavations, made possible with lead funding from the Leon Levy Foundation, is, like the original excavations, jointly conducted by the Penn Museum and the British Museum. At the Penn Museum, Dr. William Hafford, Ur Digitization Project Manager and his team, under the supervision of Dr. Richard Zettler, Associate Curator-in-Charge of the Near East Section, and Dr. Steve Tinney, Associate Curator-in-Charge of the Babylonian Section, have examined and digitized thousands of records stored in the Penn Museum Archives and documenting the excavation.

One set of records particularly caught Dr. Hafford’s eye: a set of division lists telling which objects went to which museum. Half of all artifacts stayed in the new nation of Iraq, but the other half was split between London and Philadelphia. The record for the eighth season, 1929–30, surprised him. It said that the Penn Museum would receive, among other items, one tray of “mud of the flood” and two “skeletons.”  Further research into the Museum’s object record database indicated that one of those skeletons, 31-17-404, deemed “pre-flood” and found in a stretched position, was recorded as “Not Accounted For” as of 1990.

Exploring the extensive records Woolley kept, Hafford was able to find additional information and images of the missing skeleton, including Woolley himself painstakingly removing an Ubaid skeleton intact, covering it in wax, bolstering it on a piece of wood, and lifting it out using a burlap sling.  When he queried Dr. Monge about it, she had no record of such a skeleton in her basement storage—but noted that there was a “mystery” skeleton in a box.

When the box was opened later that day, it was clear that this was the same skeleton in Woolley’s field records, preserved and now reunited with its history.

The Skeleton’s History


After Woolley uncovered the Royal Cemetery, he sought the earliest levels in a deep trench that became known as “The Flood Pit” because, around 40 feet down, it reached a layer of clean, water-lain silt. Though it was apparently the end of the cultural layers, Woolley dug still further. He found burials dug into the silt and eventually another cultural layer beneath. The silt, or “flood layer,” was more than ten feet deep in places.

Reaching below sea level, Woolley determined that the original site of Ur had been a small island in a surrounding marsh. Then a great flood covered the land. People continued to live and flourish at Ur, but the disaster may have inspired legends. The first known recorded story of an epic flood comes from Sumer, now southern Iraq, and it is generally believed to be the historic precursor of the Biblical flood story written millennia later.

The burial that produced the Penn Museum skeleton along with ten pottery vessels was one of those cut into the deep silt. Therefore, the man in it had lived after the flood and was buried in its silt deposits. The Museum researchers have thus nicknamed their re-discovery “Noah,” but, as Dr. Hafford notes, “Utnapishtim might be more appropriate, for he was named in the Gilgamesh epic as the man who survived the great flood.”

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Monday, 6 October 2014

WHO ARE THE FIRST AMERICANS


Nearly one billion people today call the Americas home, inhabiting territories that stretch from the wide expanses of Canada and the United States, down through Mexico and Central America, and south through the varied landscapes of South America to Chile—from sparsely populated regions to some of the most crowded cities on the planet. And yet, as recently as 16,000 years ago, there may not have been anyone in these lands at all. Who were the earliest Americans, and how and when did they get here? These are questions that have long fascinated archaeologists and the public alike. As with all scientific endeavors, uncovering the story of how and when people arrived in the Americas will require an accumulation of evidence and data, and will long continue to be subject to revision. Here, then, is where the research has led so far.
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Sunday, 5 October 2014

1,000 year old Islamic necropolis found Archaeology


La Mancha, Spain – Researchers have found the buried remains of Spain’s Islamic civilization and a site so full of riches they believe it could take two hundred years to unearth it all.


An Islamic necropolis over 1,000 years old

Among the finds are Copper and Bronze Age household goods, Roman pottery and traces of Celt-Iberian settlements. But according to project leader Víctor López Menchero, the most exciting discovery is an ancient necropolis containing seven bodies.

Uncovered in a trench just 4 meters squared, the positioning of the bodies — all facing south east towards Mecca — and the lack of accompanying burial items, both suggest that it is a Muslim graveyard.

For López Menchero, the discovery of an Islamic necropolis was a real surprise – few Islamic remains have been discovered in Castilla-La Mancha. Moreover, “the existence of a necropolis, or city of the dead, confirms the existence of a ‘city of the living’ – an Islamic population would have been living nearby at higher altitude” said López Menchero in a statement.

Spain under Moorish rule

Much of Spain was under Islamic rule from the eighth to the thirteenth centuries, with the Alhambra palace in Granada and the Mezquita in Cordoba being the most prominent examples of the Moorish occupation of Spain. In fact, Alcázar de San Juan takes its name from an old Moorish fortress (al-Qassr in arabic), which was later garrisoned by the knight’s of St John.

Moorish Spain was an intellectual melting pot with Muslim, Jewish and Christian scholars exchanging key Greek, Latin and Arabic texts, helping to spark the European Renaissance.

4,000 years of occupation

Other findings have also come to light in the excavations, including a Roman inscription on a piece of pottery, evidence of Bronze Age occupation such as a cheese dish and other utensils, providing rich evidence of each and every civilisation that passed through the region in last 4,000 years.

This suggests that the landscape could be one of the most important sites in Castilla-La Mancha, and even Spain. “We have remains of the Chalcolithic, the Bronze Age, Iberian settlements, a Roman villa, a Muslim farmhouse, the Christian reconquest and the quarry for the millstones which were most important in the region” explained the project director.

A whole world to explore

Victor López Menchero confessed that although it was suspected that they would find remains of great interest, they did not expect to find a cemetery, let alone one in such good condition, given that it is on shallow, arable land occupied to the present day.

“There is a world to explore” said López Menchero “we are not talking about a four-year project: to fully understand everything we’re talking one or two hundred years.”

López Menchero’s archaeological project, jointly run by Castilla-La Mancha University and authorities in Alcázar de San Juan was established in 2013. In the future, they hope to collaborate with the Ministry of Culture to ensure the site of Piédrola can become a major reference for the history and archaeology not only of Alcazar, but the region and the whole of Spain.
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Spain's earliest ever image of Jesus found Archaeology

One of the world's earliest representations of Christ has been unearthed in southern Spain by a team of archaeologists, a glass plate which shines new light on the arrival of Christianity in Spain.

The green glass paten, the plate which holds the Holy Eucharist in churches, is the earliest depiction of Jesus found in Spain and is in excellent condition compared to similar pieces discovered around Europe.


“We know it dates back to the 4th century, in part because popes in the following centuries ordered all patens to be made out of silver,” Marcelo Castro, head of the Forum MMX excavation project, told The Local.

The team of archaeologists have so far managed to find 81 percent of the paten at the site of a religious building in Cástulo, an ancient Iberian town in the province of Jaén, Andalusia.

Measuring 22 centimetres in diameter, it shows three beardless men with short hair and halos over their heads.

According to Castro, the figures are Jesus and the apostles Paul and Peter as depicted in Christ in Majesty, an early Christian art form which copied Roman and Byzantine styles.

The Forum MMX team have been able to establish the paten was made in the 300s thanks to coins and ceramic objects found at the same site.

“We were wary about presenting the paten as a 4th century piece in case it clashed with previous studies into the chronology of Christianity in Spain,” Castro explained.

But their estimates coincide with the rule of Constantine, the first Roman emperor to claim conversion to Christianity, who also ensured the religion's clandestine followers were no longer persecuted.  

The paten was put on display on Wedneday at the Archaeological Museum of Linares (Jaén), alongside other ancient pieces such as a mosaic of Cupid (Mosaico de los Amores), unearthed in 2012 and named as one of the discoveries of the year by National Geographic. 
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Saturday, 4 October 2014

Pompeii - Heavy Rain Washes Away Ancient Archaeological Site

Italy's culture minister has demanded explanations on Sunday after further collapses in the ancient Roman city of Pompeii over the weekend.

Concerns over the state of one of the world's most treasured archaeological sites have been raised after several collapses over recent months and years, which have led some to suggest the site is being neglected.


The recent collapse of a wall of a tomb in Pompeii, which was preserved under ash from a volcanic eruption in 79 A.D. and rediscovered in the 18th century, is believed to have been brought down by heavy rain.

Measuring around 1.7 metres (5.5 feet) high and 3.5 metres long, it collapsed in the necropolis of Porta Nocera in the early hours of Sunday.

A section of an arch supporting the Temple of Venus collapsed on Saturday.

The Temple of Venus is in an area of the site which was already closed to visitors, while access to the necropolis has been closed following the collapse of the wall.

Culture minister Dario Franceschini, who was appointed last month, summoned officials responsible for the site to Rome for an "emergency meeting" on Tuesday.

He has stated he wanted a report on the reasons for the latest collapses and would investigate routine maintenance at Pompeii, as well as the progress of an ambitious restoration project launched last year with European Union funds.

Maria Pia Guermandi, a Pompeii expert with heritage group Italia Nostra, told the Telegraph the collapses would continue if low cost maintenance procedures, such as clearing drainage channels, were overlooked.

She said: "Months in to the programme, nothing is being done to reduce the risk of rain."

"The EU money is being focused on the restoration of a few important houses, but Pompeii doesn't need expert restorers, it needs workmen who can provide daily maintenance. These two new collapses show the situation is still out of control."

She added: "The money needs to be spent by 2015 or funding will be withdrawn, yet only about ten million has been used and things have been slowed down by in-fighting at the ministry of culture."

Pompeii, a UNESCO World heritage site, was home to about 13,000 people when it was buried under ash, dust and pumice pebbles after a volcanic eruption blast equivalent to around 40 atomic bombs.

Around two-third of the 165-acre city has been uncovered. It is one of Italy's most popular tourist attractions, drawing in over two million tourists every year.

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Greece: the Acropolis is not in danger of collapse

The Acropolis is falling down and will need significant work to shore it up, archaeologists have warned.

Engineers have found that a section of the huge flat-topped rock on which the ancient Parthenon sits in Athens is beginning to give way, the Greek news agency ANA has said.


The ancient citadel located on a high rocky outcrop above the Greek capital contains the remnants of some of the world's most historic ancient buildings, the most famous being the temple Parthenon.

Teams from the Central Archaeological Council found "instability over quite a wide area" after investigating a rockfall in January in which a boulder of "considerable size" tumbled from the most visited tourist site in Greece.

Work to secure the southern slope of the hill on which the 2,500-year-old temple complex sits will be necessary and archaeologists have blamed rainwater pipes from the old Acropolis museum.

There is evidence that the Acropolis was inhabited as far back as the fourth millennium BC, but it was Pericles in the fifth century BC who coordinated the construction of the site's most important buildings: the Parthenon, the Propylaia, the Erechtheion and the temple of Athena Nike.

Construction on the Parthenon began in 447BC when the Athenian Empire was at the height of its power.

Despite sharp cuts elsewhere, the restoration work on the site that has been going on since the 1970s has remained sacrosanct.

Greece has endured six years in a recession, with unemployment soaring to 27%. For the first time since 2008 it is expected to see growth of around 0.4% this year, The Times reported.

The Acropolis is not the only ancient world monument under threat of collapse. Activists have claimed the Pyramid of Djoser, the oldest pyramid in Egypt in the ancient burial ground of Saqqara, is being destroyed by the firm hired to restore it.

According to the Non-stop Robberies movement, the company hired by Egypt's Ministry of Antiquities to restore the pyramid – called Shurbagy - has broken preservation laws requiring that any new construction be less than 5% of the preserved structure.

In March, further collapses in the ancient Roman city of Pompeii were reported amid calls for more restoration funding for the UNESCO world heritage site.
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