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explorator 6.15


David Meadows
 

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explorator 6.15 August 10, 2003
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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!!!
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================================================================

Thanks to Arthur Shippee, Bill Kennedy, Bob Heuman, Cindy
Byrne, Dave Sowdon, Francis Deblauwe, Glenn Meyer, Hernan Astudillo,
John Hall, John McMahon, Judy Underwood, Richard Pettigrew, W. Richard
Frahm,
Albert Reiner, Chris Hopkins, Paul Cowie, Yonatan Nadelman, Donna
Hurst, Karen Young, Joan Griffith, and Joan Paschfor headses
upses this week (as always hoping I have left no one out).

... another slow week.

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AFRICA, EUROPE, AND ASIA
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I don't usually cover things *this* ancient, but what the heck ...
a 130 million years b.p. strand of spider silk has been found preserved
in amber:



Early hominids may have been more 'human' than previously thought:



Details of that oldest astronomical observatory found near Goseck
last year (including the 'Nebra disk') were made public this week:

,3367,1441_A_942824_1_A,00.html

Seahenge might be going on public display:



A neolithic statuette of a head was recently found in the Czech
Republic:



Authorities this week released a list of the 30 "most wanted"
antiquities missing from Baghdad's museum:



A large ancient cemetery has been revealed during a dig at the
site of Athens' old airport at Hellenikon:



An Iron Age burial (and perhaps a cemetery) has been found near
a small Tuscan town:



Recent archaeological work suggests Caligula might have been as
megalomaniacal as our ancient sources suggest:

,3604,1014329,00.html

.xml



In the wake of last week's discovery of a Roman cosmetics jar (see
the Repeats section if you missed it) comes a brief overview of
Roman cosmetics:



The Ayodhya dig is officially over (I suspect the fallout isn't):



They've finally found St. Guthlac's Priory and have to rush to
excavate it:



Archaeologists have made a number of finds beneath Lichfield
Cathedral:



The mystery of a medieval shipwreck found last year in Newport
may have been solved:


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THE AMERICAS
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A Canadian scholar thinks Francis Drake made it rather further
north than is currently believed:



cf.:

62961

Not sure if Hawaii is technically 'the Americas' or not, but a
controlled burn which went out of control on Oahu has revealed a
number of sites on the Makua Military Reservation (and, no doubt,
will have quite a bit of political fallout):



Also in the 'not sure' department, but for different reasons (did
this one get mentioned before?) is the discovery of a pre-Mayan
complex civilization in Nicaragua:


,1,5489277.story?coll=sfla-news-caribbean

Aboriginal remains, possibly 2000 - 3000 b.p. have been found
at a construction site in Ohio:


17.html

... I don't think this is the same, but it's also Ohio:


tml

Coverage of the Aztecs exhibit making its way across Europe:


5.htm?id=356935&rep=324 (Spanish)

Revisionism (is it?) about the purpose of Macchu Picchu:



Ancient irrigation practices are being revived in Peru:



A high-tech survey of the Hudson River has revealed piles of
potential sites:



This week it's "scientists" who are clumsy ... stumbling onto
the realization that clocks and watches on the Hunley weren't
quite right:


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ALSO OF INTEREST
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There's a new archaeological dating method, based on superconductivity:



Marriage rites in various cultures, ancient and modern:



NPR's 'Radio Expeditions' had a nice feature on Louis Leakey and
his legacy (includes sound in Real format):



A bit of a foofera this week (what's the difference between a
foofera and a brouhaha?) about whether the British Museum was
involved in "secret talks" to at least lend the Parthenon/Elgin
Marbles to Greece for the Olympics (the first article is the
'latest word'):

,11711,1011754,00.html

A response to the 'ark hype' associated with Ballard's forays
into the Black Sea:

,2763,1015350,00.html

An article in the Village Voice has one employee from the Met
suggesting that ALL antiquities at that institution are
"plunder":



The Shanghai Museum has spent a pile of cash to purchase a tenth-
century collection of calligraphy:


a_art_030804042705&e=5

Opera has returned to the Baths of Caracalla in Rome:



There's a new edition of the Chicago Manual of Style out ... with
some significant changes (no doubt graduate students will be
buying up all the copies in order to hide them from their
committees!):



A damaged water pipe clogged a number of books at Johns Hopkins'
Peabody library:



The New York Times has a brief history of dentistry:



... while the CSM has a history of sugar:



There's a new curatrix at the Frick:



A Viking fashion show (!?):



TION=ENTERTAINMENT&TEMPLATE=DEFAULT
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ON THE WEB
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The Archaeological Expedition in Nisa has put up a summary of this
season's finds:



UCinncinnati's Earthwork's site (mound recreation):

(press
coverage)
(site)

Africa and World Prehistory (Introduction):


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NEW ONLINE BOOKS
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*The Western Regions according to the Hou Hanshu* (trans. John Hill):


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ON THE ARCHAEOLOGY CHANNEL
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The Archaeology Channel has an interview with film-maker Jason
Williams about how he and his team 'rediscovered' the Nimrud
Treasure:


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CRIME BEAT
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Another case of trying to recover art looted by the Nazis:



The author of a book on rebuilding Iraq has been charged with
smuggling some of that nation's antiquities:

,0,426680
5.story
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AT ABOUT.COM
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N.S. Gill's Ancient History site seems to be becoming more blog
like ... assorted items of interest:


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BOOK REVIEWS
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Donald Kagan, *The Peloponnesian War*:



Steven Mithen, *After the Ice: A global human history 20,000-
5000 BC*



Stephen Knapp, *Proof of Vedic Culture's Global Existence*:


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EXHIBITIONS
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Coming of Age in Ancient Greece:


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CLASSICIST'S CORNER
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While Sam Waksal's prison reading list does include some
'ancient'material, it's probably no surprise that Plato isn't included:



The New York Times has a huge article (originally from Der
Spiegel?) on Leo Strauss and his influence:



Not all references to Sparta Warriors are what we might immediately
think:



The latest on the Olympic Truce project:



Peter Jones:


2003-08-09&id=3386

Akropolis News in Classical Greek:


Radio Finland's Nuntii Latini


Radio Bremen's Der Monatsr¨¹ckblick - auf Latein


U.S. Weather in Latin:

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REPEATS
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Delphic Oracle:

,6903,1011370,00.htm
l

89EEDF&pageNumber=1&catID=2

Roman Cosmetic Jar:



Zeus Hypsistos Temple:


ub=SciTech

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OTHER SOURCES OF ARCHAEOLOGICAL NEWS
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Ancient World Web Breaking News Page:



Archaeologica:



Archaeology Magazine's Newsbriefs:



Bible and Interpretation Breaking News:



CBA Newsfeed:



CBA Archaeoblog:



Francis Deblauwe's 'Iraq War and Archaeology' site:



Maritime Underwater Archaeological News:



Michael Ruggeri's Ancient America and Mesoamerica News:

!35!F6!26C030D734B7/Topiltzin-2091/Ancie
ntAmericaand/

Mirabilis.ca (blog):



Paleojudaica (blog):



Stone Pages Archaeo News:



Texas A&M Anthropology News Site:



================================================================
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
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