¿ªÔÆÌåÓý

ctrl + shift + ? for shortcuts
© 2025 Groups.io

Explorator 5.45


 

================================================================
explorator 5.45 March 9, 2003
================================================================
Editor's note: Depending on your mail software, some urls may
wrap (especially those from the Telegraph) which will require
you to rebuild the url at your end; if you get a 'file not
found', check to see if the url wrapped on you. Most urls should
be active for at least eight hours from the time of publication.

For your computer's protection, Explorator is sent in plain text
and NEVER has attachments. Be suspicious of any Explorator which
arrives otherwise!!!
================================================================
================================================================

Thanks to Arthur Shippee, Karl Wittwer, Donna Hurst, Arieh Rochman-Halperin,
Yonatan Nadelman, John Hall, Maurice O'Sullivan, Steve Rankin,
Chris Renaud, Rick Pettigrew, Dave Sowdon, Bill Kennedy, Hernan
Astudillo, John McMahon, Neal Buccino, W. Richard Frahm, 'leanne',
and 'alesmonetos'for headses upses this week (a.a.h.i.h.l.n.o.o.)

================================================================
================================================================
AFRICA, EUROPE, AND ASIA
================================================================
Time for the annual 'what-happened-to-the-Neanderthals' piece, this
time suggesting they did not interbreed with 'modern' humans:






... or perhaps they just weren't smart enough:



More on the effect war would have on Iraq's archaeological heritage
(is it my imagination, or is there an unprecedented amount of coverage of
this aspect of the impending conflict? This must be the legacy of the
Bamiyan Buddhas ...):


(really thorough)




The Daily Star has a nice piece on Sidon:



A recent CAT scan (no pun intended, surely) has revealed that what
was one believed to be a mummified kitty is actually a dog:



A short piece on a recently-discovered statue of Ti:



Another book out questions the veracity of the traditional Masada
story:



This really should be a followup, but since there was so much coverage
in the past week (plus some items passed along that I missed), it's
probably a good thing to bring it up here ... the Villa of the Papyri
is now open to the public:






,12576,905382,00.html


A 6000 b.p. axe head has been found by a five-year-old boy in
Worcestershire (and he didn't even stumble):



The Vindolanda Trust's Roman Army Museum now boasts a theatre:



"Massive" excavation(s) is/are about to begin on Bulgaria's Rhodope
mountain:



A Byzantine 'treasure trove' has been found by a Hungarian team
working in Alexandria:




Archaeologists have been ordered to start excavations at Ayodhya to
determine whether a Hindu temple once existed there:


,3604,908247,00.html


An Anglo Saxon thrysma is up for sale:



A detailed study of the timbers of Salisbury Cathedral suggests a supplier
dispute lies at the basis of the choice of building materials:


,3604,907517,00.html

The wreck of the Princes Royal has been found:



Construction ostensibly designed to make the Tower of London more
tourist friendly has resulted in quite a bit of damage:

,11711,906151,00.html
================================================================
THE AMERICAS
================================================================
Roadwork has revealed a Revolution-era cannon:



Peru is asking Yale to return some Machu Pichu artifacts:



More on slave plantations in the North:



This week scientists opened a watch found on the Hunley:



================================================================
ALSO OF INTEREST
================================================================
A recent study suggests using DNA to establish the origins of
skeletal material might be misleading:



The New York Times has a touristy sort of thing on St. Mary's Abbey
(York):



The spear which killed Captain Cook is up for sale (scroll down a
bit):



A commission set up to look into Nazi plunder missed looking at a
number of critical records, according to some:



It seems the Gothic Revival architectural style has revived again:


================================================================
ON THE NEWSSTANDS
================================================================
There's a new issue of Biblical Archaeology Review out:



... and Archaeology Odyssey as well:


================================================================
ON THE WEB
================================================================
The Jerusalem Archaeological Park website is worth visiting if
you haven't before; they've recently addded a section on the early
Islamic Period:



Mark Chancey, "The Myth of a Gentile Galilee":



Rochelle Altman, "Report on the Temple Tablet":


================================================================
NEW ONLINE BOOKS
================================================================
Isidore of Seville, *Chronicon*:



Vegetius, *de re militari*:


================================================================
ON THE ARCHAEOLOGY CHANNEL
================================================================
Sun Watch Indian Village/Archaeological Park:


================================================================
CRIME BEAT
================================================================
Switzerland is the centre for illicit antiquities trade:



Some village churches in England are asking for the return of
various brasses which were stolen in the 19th century:

,11711,906843,00.html

A Dali has been stolen from Rikers Island:


================================================================
AT ABOUT.COM
================================================================
Ancient History Guide N.S. Gill has a feature on St. Patrick:



Archaeology Guide Kris Hirst has a piece on 'social science fiction':


================================================================
BOOK REVIEWS
================================================================
Barbara Freese, *Coal: A Human History*:



Not really a review, but an author's account of how he brought
the ancient world 'to life' in his fictional tome "The Spartan":

,6000,909458,00.html

Also not a review, but a first chapter of *The Jester*, which seems
like it might appeal to archaeology/conspiracy theory/knights templar
fans:

,1413,36%257E27%257E1228206,00.html
================================================================
EXHIBITIONS
================================================================
Hendrick Golzius (Toledo Museum of Art):



Manet/Velzquez: The French Taste for Spanish Painting (the Met):



Aztecs (London):

,3604,909898,00.html
================================================================
CLASSICIST'S CORNER
================================================================
Coverage of a grade six toga party:



The Lysistrata Project coverage:


(Cuba!)


Here's the latest on the Iliad movie in the making:



,,30500-12263327,00.html

The botanical history of the Colosseum:



The Cleveland Museum of Art has just purchased five massive
mythological paintings by Charles Meynier:

base/entertainment/1046773951296960.xml

A nice piece on the ancient Olympics:



ClassCon in a piece on French gluttony:



... and a piece on the ethics of war:



... and a piece on blonds (or blondes):



A nice piece on various Roman things associated with the
month of March:

,1413,209~22484~1220373,00.html

Prior to 911, Donald Rumsfeld was investigating what might
be learned from ancient empires:



A review of a new game ... Praetorians:



I *think* I follow this one ... it's an appeal to Greek precedent
for the building of a baseball stadium:



Perfess'r Harris:



Peter Jones in the Spectator:



... and Dot Wordsworth:



Etymologies:

,0,7227276.story?coll=ny-health-headlines (pica)
(nunc pro tunc)
(annexation)
(bracellae)
(vocare)

Akropolis News in Classical Greek:


Radio Finland's Nuntii Latini


Radio Bremen's Der Monatsrckblick - auf Latein


U.S. Weather in Latin:


================================================================
OBITUARIES
================================================================
Luis Marden (adventurer):


================================================================
EXPLORATOR is a weekly newsletter representing the fruits of
the labours of 'media research division' of The Atrium. Various
on-line news and magazine sources are scoured for news of the
ancient world (broadly construed: practically anything relating
to archaeology or history prior to about 1700 or so is fair
game) and every Sunday they are delivered to your mailbox free of
charge!
================================================================
Useful Addresses
================================================================

Past issues of Explorator are available on the web at:


To subscribe to Explorator, send a blank email message to:
mailto:Explorator-subscribe@...

To unsubscribe, send a blank email message to:
mailto:Explorator-unsubscribe@...

To send a 'heads up' to the editor or contact him for other
reasons:
mailto:dmeadows@...

================================================================
Explorator is Copyright (c) 2003 David Meadows. Feel free to
distribute these listings via email to your pals, students,
teachers, etc., but please include this copyright notice. These
links are not to be posted to any website by any means (whether
by direct posting or snagging from a usenet group or some other
email source) without my express written permission. I think it
is only right that I be made aware of public fora which are
making use of content gathered in Explorator. Thanks!
================================================================

Join [email protected] to automatically receive all group messages.