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TOPIC: Archaeology


L

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RE: Archaeology
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The Academy of Archaeology and Sciences of Ancient India (AASAI) had launched a unique portal with the aim to preserve ancient heritage here.
The portal, www.conserveheritage.org, launched by Tamil Nadu Governor Surjit Singh Barnala yesterday, also offered a new online course on ancient Tamil Epigraphy.
AASAI is the educational wing of REACH Foundation, a non-governmental organisation founded by noted archaeologist T Sathyamurthy.

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Ancient stone wonders
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The Asuka-Fujiwara area of Nara Prefecture is believed to be the starting point of Japan as a law-governed nation.
The area, which is on a tentative list to be designated as the prefecture's fourth World Heritage Site, stretches through a village and two cities--Asukamura, Kashihara and Sakurai.
Asukamura, the main village in the area, was the location of the capital of ancient Japan between 592 and 710. During this period, eight emperors, starting with Empress Suiko, ran the Imperial government from there until the capital was moved to Heijokyo.

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Viking brooch
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Swedish archaeologists have uncovered signs of a Viking precursor to Mickey Mouse. Among the objects found during excavations at Uppåkra in southern Sweden is an iron age figure bearing a strong resemblance to the classic cartoon character.
But archaeologist Jerry Rosenberg from Lund University is confident that the bronze brooch - used as a clasp to fasten women's clothing - was in fact intended to represent a Lion King rather than a mere mouse.

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L

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RE: Archaeology
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Rising seas caused by global warming threaten to wash away historic buildings and archaeological sites on the Yukon's Herschel Island, which was listed yesterday among the world's 100 most endangered cultural landmarks.
The list, released by the New York-based World Monuments Fund, includes sites in 59 countries on every continent.
Located off the Yukon's north coast, Herschel Island is home to ancient Inuit sites, historic buildings and more than 100 graves.
This is the first time the report adds global warming to a roster of forces the organization says are threatening humanity's architectural and cultural heritage.

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La Motilla
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Archaeologists from the Group of Recent Prehistoric Studies (GEPRAN) of the Universidad de Granada, Spain, have reconstructed for the first time, in a scientific and systematic way, life in the Bronze Age in the site of La Motilla del Azuer, La Mancha (Spain).

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Hill of Tara
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The ancient Hill of Tara in Meath - once the seat of Ireland's high kings- has been named one of the world's 100 most endangered heritage sites.

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Hill of Tara in world's top 100 endangered heritage sites
Ireland's ancient Hill of Tara, once the seat of the high kings, was today named one of the world's 100 most endangered heritage sites.
The New York-based World Monument Fund placed Tara on its crisis list after campaigns and court battles failed to reroute a controversial motorway away from it.
Since 1965, the body has saved 420 irreplaceable sites around the world, including the ancient Buddhist temple of Preah Khan at Angkor, Cambodia, built in 1191.

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Oetzi
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Massive blood loss from a ruptured artery killed the 5,300-year-old Alpine "Iceman" known as Oetzi, tests confirm.
A Swiss-Italian team says the arrow that struck him in the left shoulder slit the artery under his collar bone.
Oetzi probably died as the result of a fight: he may either have fled the attacker - who then shot him in the back - or fell victim to an ambush.

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A prehistoric hunter known as Oetzi whose well-preserved body was found on a snow-covered mountain in the Alps died more than 5,000 years ago after being struck in the back by an arrow, scientists said in an article published Wednesday.
Researchers from Switzerland and Italy used newly developed medical scanners to examine the hunter's frozen corpse to determine that the arrow had torn a hole in an artery beneath his left collarbone, leading to a massive loss of blood.
That, in turn, caused Oetzi to go into shock and suffer a heart attack, according to the article published online in the Journal of Archaeological Science.
Even today, the chances of surviving such an injury long enough to receive hospital treatment are only 40 percent, according to the article.
Oetzi, also known as the Iceman, caused a sensation after his body was discovered by hikers in 1991 on a glacier 10,500 feet above sea level on the border between Austria and Italy.
The body has provided researchers with a wealth of information about the late Neolithic Age, or 3,300 to 3,100 B.C. Archaeologists believe Oetzi, who was carrying a bow, a quiver of arrows and a copper axe, may have been a hunter or warrior killed in a skirmish with a rival tribe.
The fact that the arrow's shaft was pulled out before his death may have worsened the injury, said Frank Ruehli of the University of Zurich, who carried out the research with scientists from Bolzano, Italy, where the iceman's body is preserved.
The findings confirm earlier suspicions that linked the arrowhead embedded in Oetzi's body with his death, and virtually rule out other theories that he had been the victim of a ritual sacrifice or had gotten caught in a storm.
The use of high-resolution computer tomography - normally used to diagnose living patients - allowed the researchers to create three-dimensional images of Oetzi without having to use surgical procedures that would have damaged the body.

"They've applied non-invasive techniques from medical imaging to a specific question and have confirmed that it was the arrow which killed Oetzi, without having to thaw him out. I think it's very illustrative of the importance of these new techniques to science" - Dean Falk, professor of anthropology at Florida State University,  who had previously studied the corpse but did not take part in the latest research.

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RE: Archaeology
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 Archaeologists of the UGR reconstruct the life in the Age of the Bronze through the deposit manchego of the Motilla of the Azuer

- the investigators have excavated for the first time  one of the earliest  water wells on the Iberian Peninsula

- From century XIX, motillas was erroneously interpreted as burial mounds, a theory denied by the experts at the UGR, who have demonstrated that their character of fortification, surrounded by a small town and its corresponding necropolis.

The deposits known as  "motillas" represent one of the most singular types of prehistoric establishments of the Iberian Peninsula. They occupied the region during the Bronze Age between 2200 and 1500 B.C., and are artificial knolls, of between 4 to 10 m  high, and are the result of the destruction of a stone fortification of central plant with several walled lines concentric.
 Its location on the La Mancha plain, with equal distances of 4 to 5 kilometres, had an affect to the fertile valleys of the rivers and the low-lying regions where until recently the existence of lagoons was common.

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