martes, 24 de mayo de 2011

Exploring the Hittite heartlands along the Hittite Way & 12 new Items...


Exploring the Hittite heartlands along the Hittite Way & 12 new Items...


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ARCHAEOLOGISTS are to excavate historic burial mounds at Golden Cap before they are lost to the sea. A team from the National Trust is holding a dig at the Bronze Age monument on the cliff top. They...



A University of Missouri archeologist has found a 4,000-year-old statue in Peru that gives new insight into an ancient agricultural society.  A 4,000-year-old mud figure flanked by foxes...



Mega-resort development has swallowed up much of Turkey's gorgeous Mediterranean coastline, but there are still some tucked-away spots for those who prefer peace and quiet to discos and umbrella...



A team of geologists from the Sultan Qaboos University (SQU) have confirmed discovery of remains of the oldest ancestors of elephant (Barhtyerium), according to a press release from the university...



UNIVERSITI Sains Malaysia Centre for Archaeological Research Malaysia director Assoc Prof Dr Mokhtar Saidin and his team found a suevite axe as well as flake and chopping tools in 2008, in rocks...



In 2003 archaeologists started digging in farmland three kilometers outside the village of Ortaköy, which lies 55 kilometers southeast of Çorum in an area that was once the heart of the Hittite...



An Amazonian tribe has been discovered that has no concept of time or dates, scientists say. Professor Chris Sinha, of the University of Portsmouth, led the research which found that the Amondawa...



When the third-century B.C. Egyptian historian Manetho wrote “Aegyptiaca,” his dynasty-by-dynasty account of a great civilization, the realm of the pharaohs was already vastly ancient. For Manetho,...



An international team, including NASA-funded researchers, using radio telescopes located throughout the Southern Hemisphere has produced the most detailed image of particle jets erupting from a...



North American red foxes originated from two separate genetic lineages that were isolated from each other by glaciers some half a million years ago, according to a U.S. Forest Service Pacific...



Researchers from the King Juan Carlos University (URJC) have carried out a research study published in Biological Conservation, which looked at whether spiders were more tolerant of human impact than...



Species pairs that disappear through hybridization after human-induced changes to the environment can reemerge if the disturbance is removed, according to a new mathematical model that shows the...



A fang-like tooth on double upper lips, spiny teeth on the tongue and a pulley-like mechanism to move the tongue backwards and forwards – this bizarre bite belongs to a conodont and, thanks to a...



Provided by The Archaeology News Network