Oldest known Central American pyramid tomb holds royal burials, jewels

Washington, May 19 (ANI): Archaeologists have discovered the oldest known Mesoamerican pyramid tomb, around 2,700 years old, in Chiapa de Corzo, Mexico.

The discovery may help settle a debate as to when and how the mysterious Zoque civilization arose, according to excavation leader Bruce Bachand, an archaeologist at Brigham Young University.

“We are trying to distill from the archaeology how the Zoque emerged out of an Olmec ancestral base, and it seems like it happened right around the time this tomb appeared,” National Geographic News quoted Bachand as saying.

The pyramid-top tomb had been coated head-to-toe in sacred red pigment. At the center of the tomb, Bachand”s team found a male in a pearl-beaded loincloth. To his side lay a companion, likely a female.

On their waists were jade beads shaped like howler monkeys, crocodiles, and gourds. Seashells inlaid with obsidian formed tiny masks for their mouths, which in turn held jade and pyrite ornaments.

Arrayed around the royal corpses were offerings to the gods: ceramic pots, ritual axes perhaps associated with fertility, iron-pyrite mirrors, and a red-painted stucco mask.

“These people were at the top of society, there is no doubt about it,” said Bachand.

Researchers believe that prior to the construction of this tomb, Chiapa de Corzo was a large village along a major trade route, likely operated by the Olmec from their capital city, La Venta, on the Gulf Coast.

As Chiapa de Corzo gained wealth and power it began to assert its own identity, Bachand said. The newly discovered tomb, which includes Olmec and Zoque traits, suggests this transition was well underway by 700 B.C

The pyramid, with its long, terraced platform, presages the classic Maya “E group” layout, named after the Group E at the Uaxactún site in Guatemala. Aligned with the sunrise on solstices and equinoxes, E groups appear to have astrological significance.

“So this isn”t just any old pyramid,” Bachand said. “It appears to be one of the earliest E groups in all of Mesoamerica. That”s why we are investigating it.

“And now that we”ve discovered this early tomb—well heck, no one has discovered a tomb this early in any pyramid, never mind an E group pyramid,” he added.

Bachand and his team seem to have found evidence that Chiapa de Corzo was an emerging capital as the Olmec civilization was on its way out – a bluish green jade ceremonial axe, perhaps of Olmec origin, at the base of the pyramid.

In 2008 the team had found a pit full of similar axes—including one with an Olmec design on it—in the plaza next to the pyramid as well as a nearby pit where the axes were manufactured.

The discovery of another axe deep inside the tomb, Bachand added, “is definitely associated with an axe offering of Olmec inspiration.” (ANI)

Discovering the unknown about Nottingham”s medieval sandstone caves

Washington, May 14 (ANI): A combination of old and new technology – laser and pedal power – is being used to uncover hitherto unknown facts about the layout of Nottingham”s sandstone caves.

This is the very place where the city”s famous medieval ale was brewed and, where the legendary Robin Hood is said to have been imprisoned.

The Nottingham Caves Survey, being carried out by archaeologists from Trent & Peak Archaeology at The University of Nottingham, has already produced extraordinary, three dimensional, fly through, colour animation of caves that have been hidden from view for centuries.

Below the grounds of Nottingham Castle and across the city there is a labyrinth of medieval tunnels, dungeons, maltings and cellars – people even carved primitive living quarters out of Nottingham”s sandstone cliffs.

The man-made caves, cut into the strata of rock known as Sherwood Sandstone, are being recorded by laser scanners, which produce up to 500,000 survey points a second, enabling us to see these excavations as never before.

Archaeologists already know of around 450 caves – some are well documented and currently scheduled monuments of local and national importance.

“This remarkable new technology will create a full measured record of the caves in three dimensions. This gives us two really important things – a highly detailed archaeological record of the historic caves, and a new way for people to view caves they may never have seen before. For the first time visitors will be able to explore Nottingham”s unique caves with a laptop or smartphone over the web. However, there have to be many more caves that we don”t even know about and we want to hear from anyone who might have a sandstone tunnel at the back of their house, office or garden,” Dr David Walker, of Trent & Peak Archaeology, said.

The survey will build on the work of the British Geological Survey carried out in the 1980s. (ANI)

Remains of church, ”nilometer” discovered on Egypt”s Avenue of Sphinxes

Washington, May 12 (ANI): The remains of a 5th century Egyptian Christian church and a “nilometer,” a structure used to gauge the level of the Nile during floods, are the latest finds at the “Avenue of Sphinxes”.

The Avenue of Sphinx project involves the restoration of a 2.7km ancient processional avenue that links the temples of Luxor and Karnak on the east bank of the Nile River.

Built some 3,400 years ago, the alley was guarded on both sides by 1,350 statues in the shape of sphinxes – mythological creature”s with a lion”s body and the head of a human or ram.

The pathway, comprising rest places, chapels and sphinxes with ram heads, was originally built by King Amenhotep III (1410-1372 B.C.).

The 30th Dynasty King Nectanebo I (380-362 B.C.) later reconstructed it, replacing the ram-headed sphinxes with his own head.

Divided into five sections, the path is throwing up numerous archaeological remains.

On the second section of the path, the archaeologists discovered the ruins of a 1,600-year-old church.

The stone remains showed the building had been constructed with recycled limestone blocks.

“The blocks originally belonged to the Ptolemaic and Roman temples that stretched along the Avenue of Sphinxes,” Discovery News quoted Zahi Hawass, the head of Egypt”s Supreme Council of Antiquities, as saying in a statement released by Egypt”s Supreme Council of Antiquities.

Hawass added: “They are very well preserved and decorated with scenes depicting Ptolemaic and Roman kings offering sacrifices to ancient Egyptian deities.”

At the avenue”s fourth section, the team also unearthed remains of a cylindrical sandstone nilometer with New Kingdom (1569-1081 B.C.) clay vessels at its bottom.

The structure, 7 meters in diameter, was encircled by a spiral staircase descending into the Nile.

The steps allowed for a quick reading of increase in water level, thus forecasting floods.

The archaeologists also found a collection of foundation stones used to install the sphinx” statues.

Some of the stones were decorated with scenes depicting King Amenhotep III, who began construction on the avenue.

The fragmented sphinxes are now under restoration. Soon they will be placed on display along a section of the avenue.

Egypt”s Supreme Council of Antiquity said: Development work at the third section of the path located behind the Mubarak Public Library is at its final stages, and it should be opened to the public soon.” (ANI)

Ancient water bridge found in Jerusalem

Jerusalem, May 12 (ANI): Archaeologists have found an ancient water bridge in Jerusalem that brought water to the Temple Mount near the Sultan’s Pool across from Mt. Zion.

The Israel Antiquities Authority (IAA) experts said that they have found a “spectacular arched bridge” that marked part of Jerusalem’s ancient water system while conducting archaeological rescue excavations prior to work on the city’s modern water system.

Two of the bridge’s original nine arches have now been excavated to their full height of about three meters.

The newly discovered bridge was built in 1320 C.E. by the sultan Nasser al-Din Muhammed Ibn Qalawun, as evidenced by its dedicatory inscription.

However, it was apparently constructed to replace an earlier bridge dating to the time of the Second Temple period that was part of the original aqueduct.

“The bridge, which could still be seen at the end of the 19th century and appears in old photographs, was covered over during the 20th century. We were thrilled when it suddenly reappeared in all its grandeur during the course of the archaeological excavations,” Israel National News quoted Yechiel Zelinger, excavation director on behalf of the Israel Antiquities Authority, as saying.

“The route of the Low Level aqueduct from the time of the Second Temple, beginning at Solomon’s Pools near Bethlehem and ending at the Temple Mount, is well known to scholars. Substantial parts of it have been documented along the edge of Yemin Moshe neighborhood and on the slope adjacent to the Old City’s western wall. In order to maintain the elevation of the path along which the water flowed, a bridge was erected above the ravine,” he added.

The Israel Antiquities Authority, in cooperation with the Nature and Parks Authority, is working to expose the entire length of the arched bridge. (ANI)

Jewellery, kitchens and workshops existed much before modern humans arrived

Washington, May 3 (ANI): While special abilities like symbolic art, abstract thinking, and highly organized societies might make us pretty special, evidence has proved that these traits of modern human behaviour may have existed in earlier hominids too.

In Spanish caves once occupied by Neanderthals, archaeologist Joao Zilhao of the University of Bristol unearthed punctured scallop shells crusted with mineral pigments, which was actually Neanderthal jewellery.

Painted with reds and yellows, the shells may have been worn as pendants, perhaps conveying social information about the wearer to other members of the group.

“It’s like putting on your Yankees cap when you go to the stadium so people know who you are,” Discover Magazine quoted Zilhao as saying.

Body ornaments had been found at Neanderthal camps before, but they dated to near the period when Neanderthals shared Europe with modern humans.

This led some archaeologists to suggest that Neanderthals just mindlessly copied ornaments they saw on their Cro-Magnon neighbours.

However, most of the relics found by Zilhao date to 50,000 years ago, 10,000 years before the first modern humans arrived.

The Neanderthals can finally get clear credit for their artistry, he said.

In fact, a 790,000-year-old hominid settlement in northern Israel, excavated by archaeologists from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, appears to have been divided into distinct functional spaces, with a hearthside food preparation area and a spot dedicated to flint tool making.

Researchers had thought that only Homo sapiens had such well-configured living spaces.

Now it seems that far earlier humans kept orderly homes. (ANI)

Historical importance of Brighton bypass confirmed

Melbourne, April 27 (ANI): The Brighton bypass, an Aboriginal site in the path of a major Tasmanian highway, contains the oldest evidence of human habitation in the southern hemisphere, it has been confirmed.

Nearly 3 million indigenous artefacts were found at the Jordan River levee north of Hobart.

The State Government of Tasmania asked archaeologists to examine the site after the Aboriginal community expressed concerns that construction of the Brighton bypass could damage it.

Rob Paton, the site”s archaeological director, said the final report on the dig confirms some artefacts are nearly 40,000 years old.

“They”re stone artefacts, they”re used for day to day living, cutting and sharpening. It”s that day-to-day stuff that really is rarely found,” ABC News quoted him, as saying.

Paton added: “That”s why to get a snapshot of what life was like 40,000 years ago is really quite unique, not just for Australia but for hunter-gatherer sites anywhere in the world.”

Tasmania”s Department of Infrastructure says the site will be protected.

Department Secretary Norm McIlfatrick said: “Our view is, and has always been, that we won”t carry out any work on that site until we have a full permit from the Minister for Heritage.

“Now that Minister will receive the report from us and our management plan and will also have the view of the community before he makes the decision.”

He supports the government”s alternative of building a bridge over the site.

McIlfatrick said: “Most of the heritage, or all of the heritage that we”re aware of, that is significant is under the ground.”

However, Nala Mansell-McKenna from the Tasmanian Aboriginal Centre is not impressed with the plan.

She said: “Building a bridge across it, removing the artefacts, is definitely not an option.”

The archaeologists” report will now be considered by new Heritage Minister David O”Byrne. (ANI)

Ancient city in the Egyptian eastern borders unearthed

Washington, April 26 (ANI): Archaeologists working in North Sinai have unearthed Tharu, an ancient fortified city, a move which stressed the importance of this area as the eastern gate of Egypt.

Head of Antiquities of Lower Egypt Department of the Supreme Council of Antiquities Mohamed Abdel-Maqsoud was speaking at a symposium held at the Bibliotheca Alexandrina.

He said that the discovery reveals the features of Horus military route between Egypt and the Palestinian lands.

Abdel-Maqsoud added such a discovery sheds light on an Egyptian defense strategy for Sinai since Pharaonic times.

On the other hand, Dr. Zahi Hawass, the Secretary General of the Supreme Council of Antiquities, said that the Alexandria Antiquities Restoration Department has completed the restoration works of 40 artifacts unearthed during excavations carried out in “Abu Seer”, 40 km west of Alexandria.

Hawass added the area in which the 40 pieces have been discovered is believed to be the house of Queen Cleopatra and Mark Antony’s tomb.

Hawass pointed out that among the artifacts a golden mask found on the face of a mummy dating back to the Romanian era. (ANI)

Roman altar stones unearthed at Scottish cricket ground

London, Apr.25 (ANI): Roman altar stones dating back almost 2000 years have been found at a cricket pavilion in Musselburgh, East Lothian.

According to the BBC, the stones are being described as the most significant find of their kind in the past 100 years.

Renovations were planned at the pavilion but archaeologists had to survey the protected building before work could begin.

Their unearthing of the stones and other artefacts has postponed the planned developments on the pavilion.

George Findlater, senior inspector of ancient monuments at Historic Scotland, said: “The stones have carvings and quite possibly inscriptions which can have a wealth of information on them, a lot of data about the people and their religion at that time.” (ANI)

Robin Hood’s prison under Nottingham city to be scanned with laser

London, April 24 (ANI): A dungeon that is believed to have been Robin Hood’s prison after he was captured by the Sheriff of Nottingham, is to be surveyed using a laser.

Robin Hood is believed to have been held captive in an oubliette (underground dungeon) located at what is now the Galleries of Justice.

The Nottingham Caves Survey is being conducted by archaeologists based at the University of Nottingham, and is part of a major project to explore every cave in Nottingham.

The Greater Nottingham Partnership, East Midlands Development Agency, English Heritage, the University of Nottingham and Nottingham City Council funded the two-year project, which cost 250,000 pounds.

Experts from Trent and Peak Archaeology will use a 3D laser scanner to produce a three dimensional record of more than 450 sandstone caves around Nottingham from which a virtual representation can be made.

David Knight, Head of Research at the Trent and Peak unit, said there will be no actual excavations just the use of the laser.

“The aim is to increase the tourist potential of these sites. The scanning will also make them visible ‘virtually’ which is good in terms of public access because a lot of them are health hazards,” the BBC quoted him as saying.

“That’s one of the problems with these caves – they’re very impressive but access is fairly difficult. You can imagine the health and safety issues are quite significant,” he said.

The last major survey of Nottingham’s caves was in the 1980s. The British Geological Survey (BGS) documented all known caves under the city. (ANI)

First World War soldier identified by DNA laid to rest, 94 years on

London, April 22 (ANI): A World War I hero, whose body was found in an unmarked grave, has finally received an honourable burial after his great-nephew’s DNA was used to identify him.

Private Harry Dibben, 33, died at the battle of Fromelles, France, in 1916, when he was shot in the chest during an attack on a German trench.

Although his death was confirmed after the Germans sent his identity tags to London, his body was not recovered.

Then in 2007, archaeologists found the remains of 250 unidentified soldiers from an unmarked grave in Fromelles.

Private Dibben’s great-nephew Richard Dibben, who was researching his family’s history, came to know of the exhumation and realised great-uncle Harry, who was a part of the 14th brigade of the 5th division of the Australian Imperial Force, could be among the unidentified soldiers.

Thereafter, Richard, 58, of Marnhull, Dorset, contacted the Australian Army, which sent him a DNA swab kit.

And after Richard provided his DNA the result confirmed that Harry was one of the unknown men.

Now Private Dibben – who emigrated to Australia in 1912 and enlisted with the army in 1915 – has been buried in a marked grave in a new cemetery in Fromelles, beside 75 other soldiers.

“It is all rather poignant. At last my great-uncle Harry will have formal recognition of his death and there will be a grave to visit,” the Daily Express quoted Richard, as saying. (ANI)

Maya commoners recorded history by burying relatives under homes Home

Washington, April 21 (ANI): Illiterate Maya people had a novel way of recording their histories – they buried family items and even relatives under their homes.

Excavations of Maya homes in central Belize have thrown up objects and human remains from the Classic period (250-900 A.D.) revealing that farmers and servants stored objects and buried relatives within their residences.

“Commoners may not have had the written word, but they had the means to record their own history under their feet, within walls and under their roof,” Discovery News quoted Lisa Lucero, anthropology professor at the University of Illinois, as writing in the Journal of Social Archaeology.

Lucero analysed the arrangement, colour and condition of several Maya artefacts excavated at two commoners” homes in a small Maya center called Saturday Creek, in central Belize.

Occupied from about 450 to 1150 A.D., the two homes had nearly a dozen human remains of men, women and children with artefacts arranged around and on top of the bodies.

Lucero believes those who were buried in the homes were family members who died closest to calendrical rites every 40 or 52 years or at the time, every 20-30 years, in which houses needed to be re-roofed.

Lucero said: “After the funeral rites, the house and what it contained were destroyed and burned. The ceremonial destruction provided the basis for the new house.”

The Maya used broken and whole vessels, colourful ceramic fragments, animal bones and rocks to provide ballast for a new plaster floor. All items were symbolically arranged.

Lucero said: “The Maya deposited items that had a particular history with the family. Once placed and buried, the objects disappeared from sight, not memory.”

The Maya “de-animated” objects they buried by breaking them. They believed that in this way the artefacts could enter the next stage of their life history.

Archaeologists found several vessels and jars, which underwent de-animation rites – they lacked bases or necks and had their rims broken off. Some vessels were de-animated with a “kill hole” drilled through their bottoms.

However, some bowls and jars were also buried in perfect condition. They were specifically manufactured to represent “re-animation” rites for the new house built over the old.

Some artefacts – including groups of obsidian or chert rocks – symbolized the Maya belief in the nine levels of the underworld and the 13 levels of heaven.

Lucero found that colors like red and orange, which symbolized sunrise and life, were commonly used in burials.

Black represented death and the underworld, but no black objects were found in or near a burial.

Lucero said: “Perhaps the Maya only wanted to use colors that were associated with the realm of living.”

Cynthia Robin, an anthropological archaeologist at Northwestern University, Illinois, corroborated Lucero”s conclusions.

Robin, who specializes in the study of ancient, everyday Maya society, said: “Although ancient Maya commoners didn”t write anything down, they ”wrote” their history in many other ways. The burial of ancestors is a history of the families that lived there. In a sense you could compare this to a written deed or census.

“In a similar vein, objects buried in homes often recorded religious ideas: rather than reading a religious text, you can ”read” the meaning of the objects buried in houses.” (ANI)

Remains unearthed in Southwell ‘could be Roman temple’

London, April 19 (ANI): Archaeologists have unearthed what they say could be the remains of an unknown Roman temple in Nottinghamshire.

Walls, ditches and ornate stones were revealed after excavations on the Minster C of E School site in Southwell between September 2008 and May 2009.

Ursilla Spence from Nottinghamshire County Council, the archaeologist who supervised the work, and colleagues say their analysis of the shape and quality of the remains suggest it could have been an important place of worship.

This could mean Southwell enjoyed a high status Roman Britain, the researchers added.

A wall of large block masonry that was probably plastered and possibly painted, with a ditch that may have contained water, was possibly the boundary of a large temple.

The researchers also discovered the remains of timber scaffolding for the wall. Radiocarbon dating of this dated it to the first century.

Spence said a lack of domestic remains, like pots and tools, also indicated a ceremonial use.

“This is a fascinating site. But, so far, it has raised more questions than it has answered,” the BBC quoted her as saying.

“I hope that future excavation work, when the site is developed, will throw more light on exactly what was going on here 2,000 years ago.

“But, whatever we might find in future, I believe we have already shown that Roman Southwell was a much more significant place than anyone previously thought,” she added. (ANI)

Remains unearthed in Southwell ‘could be Roman temple’

London, April 19 (ANI): Archaeologists have unearthed what they say could be the remains of an unknown Roman temple in Nottinghamshire.

Walls, ditches and ornate stones were revealed after excavations on the Minster C of E School site in Southwell between September 2008 and May 2009.

Ursilla Spence from Nottinghamshire County Council, the archaeologist who supervised the work, and colleagues say their analysis of the shape and quality of the remains suggest it could have been an important place of worship.

This could mean Southwell enjoyed a high status Roman Britain, the researchers added.

A wall of large block masonry that was probably plastered and possibly painted, with a ditch that may have contained water, was possibly the boundary of a large temple.

The researchers also discovered the remains of timber scaffolding for the wall. Radiocarbon dating of this dated it to the first century.

Spence said a lack of domestic remains, like pots and tools, also indicated a ceremonial use.

“This is a fascinating site. But, so far, it has raised more questions than it has answered,” the BBC quoted her as saying.

“I hope that future excavation work, when the site is developed, will throw more light on exactly what was going on here 2,000 years ago.

“But, whatever we might find in future, I believe we have already shown that Roman Southwell was a much more significant place than anyone previously thought,” she added. (ANI)

Lead “burrito” sarcophagus near Rome may hold a gladiator or a Christian dignitary

Washington, March 30 (ANI): A team of archaeologists has suggested that a burrito-like 1,700-year-old sarcophagus found in an abandoned city near Rome could contain the body of a gladiator or a Christian dignitary.

Found in a cement-capped pit in the ancient metropolis of Gabii, the coffin is unusual because it”s made of lead.

Only a few hundred such Roman burials are known.

“Even odder, the 800 pounds (362 kilograms) of lead fold over the corpse like a burrito,” said Roman archaeologist Jeffrey Becker.

Most lead sarcophagi look like “old-fashioned cracker boxes,” molded into a rectangular shape with a lid, he said.

The coffin, which has been in storage since last year, is about to be moved to the American Academy in Rome for further testing.

But, uncovering details about the person inside the lead coffin will be tricky.

For starters, the undisturbed tomb contained no grave goods, offering few clues about the owner.

What”s more, x-ray and CT scans-the preferred methods of coffin analysis-cannot penetrate the thick lead, leaving researchers pondering other, potentially dangerous ways to examine the remains inside.

“It”s exciting as well as frustrating, because there are no known matches in the record,” said Becker, managing director of the University of Michigan”s Gabii Project.

“Unlocking the lead coffin”s secrets could ultimately offer new insights into a powerful civilization that has lain forgotten for centuries,” he said.

Mysteries about Gabii society make the newfound lead coffin especially intriguing.

Lead was a high-value metal at the time, so a full sarcophagus made out of the stuff “is a sure marker of somebody of some kind of substance,” Becker said.

Past lead burials found throughout Europe have housed soldiers, elite members of the Christian church, and even female gladiators.

In fact, many lead coffins contain high-ranking women or adolescents instead of men, according to Jenny Hall, a senior curator of Roman archaeology at the Museum of London, who was not involved in the new study.

“However, the newfound sarcophagus” tentative age may make the gladiator scenario unlikely,” said Bruce Hitchner, a visiting professor in classical archaeology at All Souls College at the UK”s University of Oxford.

“The coffin dates back to the fourth or fifth centuries AD, while the gladiator heyday was centuries earlier,” said Hitchner.

Becker”s team hopes to find out more about the person inside the lead sarcophagus.

The researchers” only hint so far is a small foot bone protruding through a hole in one end of the coffin. (ANI)

Museum hunts for shipwreck piece

Maritime archaeologists are appealing for public help to track down part of an historic shipwreck which washed ashore in Geraldton during last week’s storms.

The WA Museum was alerted to the discovery of the 3.5 metre timber frame by a local resident who stumbled across it on Glenfield Beach.

The relic, believed to be from a mid-19th century shipwreck was removed before it could be retrieved and positively identified by the museum.

The museum’s regional manager, Catherine Belcher, says anyone with information on the whereabouts of the item is urged to call the museum.

“The more that the ocean reveals to us … the more the maritime archaeologists and conservators and historians are able to piece together that really rich and diverse history that we’re fortunate to have hear on our mid-west coast and of course the Abrolhos Islands as well,” she said.

Why religious beliefs are now considered the basis of origins of Palaeolithic art

Washington, March 27 (ANI): A new research has revealed why religious beliefs are now considered the basis of the origins of Palaeolithic art.

For years, anthropologists, archaeologists and historians of art understood these artistic manifestations as purely aesthetic and decorative motives.

Eduardo Palacio-Perez, researcher at the University of Cantabria (UC), has now revealed the origins of a theory that remains nowadays/lasts into our days.

“This theory does not originate with the prehistorians, in other words, those who started to develop the idea that the art of primitive peoples was linked with beliefs of a symbolic-religious nature were the anthropologists,” said Palacio-Perez, author of the study and researcher at UC.

This idea appeared at the end of the 19th century and the beginning of the 20th century.

Up until then, Palaeolithic art had been interpreted as a simple aesthetic and decorative expression.

“Initially, scientists saw this art as the way that the people of the Palaeolithic spent their free time, sculpting figurines or decorating their tools,” Palacio pointed out.

His investigation has revealed the reasons for the move from this recreational-decorative interpretation of Palaeolithic art to different one of a religious and symbolic nature.

Palaeolithic art is composed of so-called mobiliary art – pieces of stone, horn and bone sculpted or engraved – that are included within archaeological deposits.

These discoveries, which spread through the scientific community from 1864, are dated to the same period as the rest of the archaeological material and there was “practically no doubt about their Palaeolithic origin”.

Between 1880 and 1900, the conception of art changed in western society.

Anthropologists, archaeologists and historians of Art started to consider other possibilities than the Palaeolithic origin of art.

Artistic theory and practice that was being made in Europe changed with postimpressionism, the appearance of Art Nouveau or the generalisation of photography; in addition, with the mass arrival to museums of the metropolis of artistic pieces from non-Greco-Latin cultures and “primitive arts” of the colonies.

“All this produced a transformation in the concept of art itself”, pointed out Palacio.

“At this time, the conception of the origins and the nature of art that the westerners and scientists had at the time was redefined. From then on, Palaeolithic art was reinterpreted in a symbolic-religious key, at the time when the age of parietal art was accepted”, concluded the researcher. (ANI)

Archaeological dig in China reveals 4,200-year-old eternal embrace

Washington, March 27 (ANI): It’s said that true love is eternal, and archaeologists have found an example of this adage in the form of a 4,200-year-old grave in China, in which a couple was found laying and hugging each other.

The ancient grave was found by the Chengdu Municipal Institute of Cultural Relics and Archaeology in the Sanxing Village of Mimou Township, Qingbaijiang District.

The bones of the “oldest” couple are clearly visible.

Excavation work also discovered numerous exquisite stone vessels, porcelains, housing ruins as well as graves dating form China’s ancient Shang Dynasty.

The Sanxingcun site, located in the sixth group of the Sanxing Village in Mimou Township, Qingbaijiang section of the Chengdu-Mianyang-Leshan inter-city railway line, covers an area of about 28,000 sqm, through which the Chengdu-Mianyang Highway runs.

In May 2004, the Chengdu Municipal Institute of Cultural Relics and Archaeology excavated part of the site’s western side.

Archaeologists believe that the Sanxingcun site was once a large ancient settlement in the Chengdu Plain in China’s ancient Shang and Zhou dynasties.

There have always been settlers on this land over the past 4,000-plus years.

Plenty of porcelains and stone vessels were excavated from the Sanxingcun site, such as flat-bottomed pots and jars with high handles that people in the period of the Sanxingdui culture used to hold items and food. (ANI)

World’s oldest temple found in Turkey

Washington, March 20 (ANI): A team of archaeologists has claimed that a temple being excavated in southeastern Turkey is 12,000 years old and is likely the oldest temple ever uncovered in the world.

According to a report by United Press International (UPI), the site was first identified in 1986 when a farmer tilling his field in Sanliurfa found a statuette in the soil.

Since then, archaeologists have uncovered the foundation of the temple built in the Neolithic Age along with carvings of pigs, foxes, snakes, fawns and headless humans.

Officials with the Harran University Archaeology Department have yet to identify the culture that built the temple or their belief system.

German teams were the first to excavate beginning in 1995, but the Turkish Culture and Tourism Ministry placed the site on its first-degree protection list in 2005, taking control of the research.

Prior to this discovery, the world’s oldest known temple was in Malta, dating from 5,000 B.C. (ANI)

Ancient statues found in mortuary temple of Egyptian pharaoh

Washington, March 17 (ANI): Reports indicate that a team of archaeologists has unearthed two large red granite statues in southern Egypt at the mortuary temple of one of the most powerful pharaohs, who ruled nearly 3,400 years ago.

According to a report in Discovery News, a ministry statement said that the team discovered a 13-foot (4 meter) statue of Thoth, the ancient god of wisdom and the top part of a statue of Pharaoh Amenhotep III standing next to another god.

Both were found buried in the pharaoh’s mortuary temple on the west bank of the Nile in the southern temple city of Luxor.

On February 28, archaeologists discovered a massive red granite head of Amenhotep III at the same temple.

The head, which is about the height of a person, is the best preserved sculpture of Amenhotep III’s face found to date.

Amenhotep III, who was the grandfather of the famed boy-pharaoh Tutankhamun, ruled from 1387-1348 B.C. at the height of Egypt’s New Kingdom and presided over a vast empire stretching from Nubia in the south to Syria in the north.

The temple was largely destroyed, possibly by floods, and little remains of its walls.

But, archaeologists have been able to unearth a wealth of artifacts and statuary in the buried ruins, including two statues of Amenhotep made of black granite found in March 2009. (ANI)

First ‘modern’ humans may have appeared in Iberian Peninsula about 33,000 yrs ago

Washington, March 16 (ANI): A new research has suggested that the first ‘modern’ human beings may have appeared in the Iberian Peninsula about 33,000 years ago.

The research was carried out by a group of archaeologists from the Centre for Prehistoric Archaeological Heritage Studies of the Universitat Autonoma de Barcelona (UAB) at the Cova Gran site in Spain.

The research contributes to stirring up scientific debate about the appearance of the first “modern” human beings on the Iberian Peninsula and their possible bearing on the extinction of the Neanderthals.

The samples obtained at Cova Gran using Carbon 14 dating refer to a period of between 34,000 and 32,000 years in which this biological replacement in the Western Mediterranean can be located in time.

Cova Gran is a large shelter discovered in 2002, located in the area of Les Avellanes-Santa Linya -La Noguera- and is one of the rare European archaeological sites to enable the study of what is known in Paleoanthropology as “transitions” or critical phases in which transformations and remodelling that are essential for reconstructing the history of our species can be detected.

The investigators from the UAB have worked on an area of 60 metres squared, excavating a large area which has enabled them to reconstruct the way in which the people who inhabited the shelter lived.

Cova Gran was occupied successively by Neanderthals and “modern” humans in small groups of 15 to 20 people with a similar lifestyle: hunting, gathering, making tools for their daily activities and obtaining and processing food for which the use of fire was essential.

In spite of this, each species used very different techniques and primary materials.

Among the remains found that are attributable to Homo sapiens are several perforated sea snail shells, generally considered to be an indicator of the distribution of the species throughout Africa, the Middle East and Western Europe.

They also denote the existence of a symbolic language and cognitive capacities for which there is no evidence during the Middle Palaeolithic

These objects indicate that Homo sapiens travelled widely across lands from the Mediterranean coast to the Pyrenean foothills, a distance of over 150 kilometres, although the researchers do not rule out the existence of social networks which would connect groups separated by large distances and through which these objects would circulate. (ANI)