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  • News

    Showing 286 - 290 out of 456

    • Diggers Find England's Oldest Prayer Beads on Lindisfarne Holy ... - Ancient Origins

      Archaeologists exploring Lindisfarne, an island known for its rich religious history - including the first Viking invasion - have recovered the oldest prayer beads ever found in England.
    • The Gods and an Ancient Andean Calendar at the Salar de Uyuni - Ancient Origins

      Within the Bolivia 2020 Pre-Expedition developed in February 2020 by the Akakor Geographical Exploring team under the direction of Lorenzo Epis, the imposing Salar de Uyuni and surrounding areas
    • Bronze Urartian Belt Proves Kingdom Extended Much Further North - Ancient Origins

      The past four years of excavations in Turkey’s ancient city of Satala have produced many exciting finds. Perhaps the most remarkable of the artifacts discovered there so far are the ornate Urartian bronze belt
    • New Projectile Point Style Could Suggest Two Separate Migrations into North America – Popular Archeology - Popular Archaeology

      Science Advances—Through excavation of a site in Texas, researchers have identified a particular style of projectile point – or triangular blade often attached to a weapon that would be thrown – dated between 13,500 and 15,500 years ago, they say. This is earlier than typical Clovis-style technologies dated to 13,000 years ago. The finding suggests that projectile points changed over time from the stemmed form found here into the more widespread, Clovis-style lanceolate fluted projectile point. It’s also possible, say the study’s authors, that the projectile point style they found in Texas is a distinct style created by people of an earlier, separate migration into the Americas. Clovis points – thought to date as early as 13,000 years ago – were once thought to reflect the earliest occupation of North America. However, more recent excavations in western North America have identified a different style of point technology – the Western Stemmed Tradition. The connections between the artifact assemblages of Clovis and Western Stemmed Traditions, however, remain unknown. Here, Michael R. Waters and his colleagues report more than 100,000 artifacts, including 328 tools and 12 complete and fragmented projectile points, excavated from the Buttermilk Creek Complex horizon of the Debra L. Friedkin site, which dates earlier than the Clovis history. From 19 optically stimulated luminescence dates of sediments, they determined the artifacts were between 13,500- and 15,500- years-old. The Buttermilk Creek Complex featured bladed projectile points that exhibited similarities to artifact assemblages of the Clovis, with lanceolate features. Waters and colleagues suggest that once developed, the lanceolate fluted point technology (associated with Clovis) could have spread over much of North America into northern Mexico, or alternatively, the stemmed and lanceolate point traditions may be evidence of two separate human migrations into North America.
    • Origins of Remote Oceania settlers – Popular Archeology - Popular Archaeology

      Analyzing seafaring strategies and climate impacts on ocean travel can help researchers reconstruct how humans populated one of the most remote places on Earth, according to a study*. Around 3,400 years ago, humans began crossing the Pacific Ocean to settle Remote Oceania, the far-flung collection of islands that includes Tonga, Samoa, and islands in Micronesia. Although archaeological, linguistic, and genetic evidence delimits the time of arrival of many settlers, the origins of these earliest inhabitants have proven difficult to establish. Alvaro Montenegro and colleagues analyzed ocean routes across the Pacific using computer seafaring simulations primed with high-resolution data for winds, ocean currents, precipitation, and land distribution. Additionally, accounting for the influence of the El Niño Southern Oscillation, the authors constructed “shortest-hop” trajectories to identify the most likely port of departure for the inhabitants of five major regions in Remote Oceania. Among other findings, the analysis suggests that the settlers of western Micronesia originated from a location near the Maluku Islands. The authors also compare their results with a number of previously proposed migration scenarios such as “Slow Boat to the Bismarcks,” “Voyaging Corridor Triple I,” and “Mobile Founding Migrant.” The findings demonstrate the need to incorporate Pacific Islander voyaging strategies and the impact of environmental variables on ocean travel into the analysis of colonization in Remote Oceania, according to the authors.