• Ancient Digger teaches Archaeology and History to all Ages!

Monday, November 29, 2010

Monday Ground Up: Putna Monastery In Bukovina, Romania




Putna Monastery took three years to build on land bordering the Putna River in Bukovina River. Construction of the Romanian Orthodox monastery was overseen by Prince Stephen the Great, ruler of Moldavia from 1457 to 1504.

Prince Stephen the Great was the son of Bogdan the Second and was considered by many to be one of the best  army commanders of all times. Prince Stephen was a genius in politics and was a great promoter of Romanian culture.

Saturday, November 27, 2010

Quest For King Solomon's Mines: Featuring Eminent Archaeologist Thomas E. Levy



Watch the full episode. See more NOVA.

It's a Saturday night, and yes, I'm watching NOVA on PBS. I almost couldn't help myself after a colleague sent me the information for the Quest For King Solomon's Mines (follow this link for the full video) on NOVA. Many scholars today question whether King Solomon was a king at all, as no evidence has ever been found by archaeologists, until now.

Mining shafts have been found deep in the deserts of Jordan along with skeletal remains suspected to be Solomon's miners. Could these be the men who held the wealth the Bible chronicles in their hands? Watch and see.

NOVA does a wonderful job in this program, outlining the history of King Solomon, his gold and copper mines, and whether we will ever know the truth about his existence.

Article Blurb via University of California

A new television documentary featuring the work of University of California, San Diego, archaeologist Thomas E. Levy proves that extensive copper production took place in Jordan during what is believed to be the Biblical era of David and Solomon — suggesting that there is some historical veracity to the Hebrew Bible’s (Old Testament) portrayal of their kingdom and that of neighboring Edom in southern Jordan.

A related and newly edited book by Levy — as well as a scholarly paper that appeared last month in a British journal — also advocate for a new high-tech “pragmatic” approach for carrying out historical archaeology in the Levant region of the Middle East, coupled with high precision radiocarbon dating, to ensure objectivity in a discipline fraught with emotional prejudice.

Official Web site of the University of California, San Diego
University of California, San Diego, 9500 Gilman Dr., La Jolla, CA 92093
(858) 534-2230

Copyright ©2010 Regents of the University of California.

Thursday, November 25, 2010

The Oldest Salt Mines Found In Azerbaijan


CNRS (1) archeologists have recently provided proof that the Duzdagi salt deposits, situated in the Araxes Valley in Azerbaijan, were already being exploited from the second half of the 5th millennium BC. It is therefore the most ancient exploitation of rock salt attested to date. And, to the researchers' surprise, intensive salt production was carried out in this mine at least as early as 3500 BC.

This work, conducted in collaboration with the Azerbaijan National Academy of Sciences and published on 1st December 2010 in the journal TÃœBA-AR, should help to elucidate how the first complex civilizations, which emerged between 4500 BC and 3500 BC in the Caucasus, were organized.

The Oldest Salt Mines Found In Azerbaijan via alphagalileo

Also check out:

Wieliczka: Underground Salt Cathedral of Poland

Monday, November 22, 2010

The Unseen World



In an unseen world, I believe nature is in full control and nature is clearly a phenomenon which was originally derived from the supernatural to the galactic universe. The supernatural is almost impossible to investigate outside of empirical thinking. The idea immediately caused the term “supernatural” to be placed with the context of “cults”, as many individuals may belief mystical thinking means we can control nature. Instead, nature controls us.

From: Anthropology Study: Do You Believe In The Unseen World?

Saturday, November 20, 2010

Heritage Trust of Lincolnshire's Roman Archaeological Dig




During 1500BC the area of Lincolnshire, soon to become a nature preserve, was flooded by the sea. During the Iron Age the area dried out and was commanded during the Roman period, where herding of cattle and production of salt took precedence.

"Archaeologists from the Heritage Trust of Lincolnshire got the chance to re-visit an area of rich roman history to scour the land for artifacts and treasures from the Roman period before the area was to be turned in to a nature reserve. Tom Hughes went along to join the team and see what they found."

Video is copyright Taken from Lincolnshire Living on Channel 7 (Virgin Media 879/ (www.channel7tv.co.uk)

Thursday, November 18, 2010

Iconic Nazi Propaganda


Guest Blurb By Michael Johnson

Propaganda can be understood as the coordinated attempt to influence public opinion through the use of the media. The word propaganda is derived from the Latin propagare, to propagate or spread, and generally propaganda tries to spread ideologies or belief systems.

 
It is frequently used by political parties and governments to encourage people to accept a political viewpoint.  As opposed to providing impartial information, propaganda presents facts selectively. This amounts to lying by omission – misleading people by leaving certain facts out.

Propaganda was used by the Nazi Party during Adolf Hitler’s leadership of Germany (1933–45). Propaganda was crucial for acquiring and maintaining power, and for implementing Nazi policies. Hitler devoted two chapters of his book Mein Kampf (1925-6) to the use of propaganda. He claimed that he had learnt the value of propaganda as a German infantryman in the First World War, where he had been exposed to very effective British propaganda.

Nazi Propaganda Continued ......From: Nazi Propaganda

Tuesday, November 16, 2010

Jim O'Donnell Photographs The Nazca Lines


© Jim O'Donnell
Jim O'Donnell from Around the World in Eighty Years tells an amusing and delightful tail of his flight over the Nazca lines. It does, however, involve a cocktail called Pisco Sours and a young, drunken archaeologist, so please keep an open mind. Let's face it, sometimes it takes a little liquid courage to face some of our fears. Jim may have had a tad too much considering his foggy memory, however his story telling keep me captivated and cracking up til the very end.

The Nazca lines as most of you know, are giant geoglyphs spread across the arid Nazca plateau between Nazca and Palpa. The lines themselves were created sometime between 400 and 650AD and are comprised of everything from straight lines to geometric shapes to stylized depictions of spiders, monkeys, orcas, lizards and, of course, the famous hummingbirds. The largest of the figures are nearly 700 feet across. Some of the lines stretch for tens of miles. ~Jim O'Donnell

Read Jim O'Donnell's full story entitled "This Don’t Take No Skill – Photographing Peru’s Nazca Lines"

Monday, November 15, 2010

Monday Ground Up: Archaeological Wonders Of Tunisia


Tunisia, officially the Tunisian Republic, is situated in northern Africa and is bordered by Algeria to the west, Libya to the southeast, and the Mediterranean Sea to the north and east. Its area is almost 165,000 km², with an estimated population of just over 10.3 million. Its name is derived from the capital Tunis located in the north-east.

Tunisia is filled with history as evident in the imprints left over a 3000 year span. Adventurers, conquerors, missionaries, traders, farmers, warriors, all made their own impact. Whether on the hills of Carthage or at the threshold of the Sahara desert. Phoenicians, Romans, Vandals, Byzantines, Turks, Spanish and French all made their way through Tunisia at one point in history, and the architecture they left behind is a reminder of state societies evolving, and at some point, falling.

Bruce Officer has compiled several articles on some archaeological sites he visited in Tunisia several years ago. For many people, Tunisia is an unknown location, however Bruce mentions Roman North Africa was a prosperous but often overlooked province.

Archaeological Sites To Visit in Tunisia

The Tophet of Carthage – Religious Sanctuary and Possible Child Sacrifice Ground



The Tophet is the sanctuary dedicated to the god Baal Hammon, the main god of the Carthaginians, and the fertility goddess Tanit. It is an open space, shaded by trees and densely packed with stone markers called stele (singular form stela). At first glance one might think these are grave markers, but they are actually markers recording an important sacrifice made to the gods, often naming the person who the stela set up.

Read: The Tophet of Carthage

The Roman Amphitheatre of El Jem


© chileno66

Indeed, so starkly alone is the building that antiquarians believed it to be an amphitheatre built in the desert, thinking it the whim of a mad emperor. But modern excavations have revealed the outlines of a fair sized city with a forum and villas of the wealthy, though these excavations have been backfilled and aren’t available for the visitor to see.

The El Jem amphitheatre is grand, even by Roman standards. It is 138 metres long and 114 metres wide, making it a little over two thirds the size of the Coliseum in Rome. It was probably built in the first few decades of the third century AD.

Read more: The Roman Amphitheatre of El Jem

Dougga – A Roman Hilltop City in Tunisia


© izzthewizz

This is Dougga, sometimes called Thugga, a Roman city not far from the North African desert frontier, but also a city rooted in its Numidian and Carthaginian past.



The Numidians were the native people of the hills and plateaus of the semi-fertile zone between the desert and the Mediterranean sea. By the time of Rome’s expansion, they had formed a kingdom, adopting written language and government from the Carthaginians – the Middle Eastern people who had settled on the coast of North West Africa and had created a trading empire. Although some of the Numidians were still nomadic, plenty lived in villages and even towns like Dougga.

Read more: Dougga – A Roman Hilltop City in Tunisia

Thuburbo Majus – Solitary Majesty of This Tunisian Roman Town


Public Domain

Thuburbo Majus, or Colonia Julia Aurelia Commoda as it was called when it was granted colonia status, was a Roman town about 60 km southwest of Carthage on the trade route that connected Carthage to the edge of the desert and the caravans that crossed it. In fact there was a Carthaginian town here before the Romans arrived and Augustus chose it as a site to settle retired army veterans in 27 BC.

Read more: Thuburbo Majus – Solitary Majesty of This Tunisian Roman Town

The Antonine Baths in Carthage, Tunisia




© Bruce Officer

Construction of the Antonine baths began under the Emperor Hadrian in AD 146 and was completed under his successor Antoninus Pius in AD 162, hence the naming of the complex. And it was indeed a complex, not a simple set of Roman baths. As well as the normal cold, warm and hot rooms there were outdoor pools and a sun terrace, as well as broad steps leading down to the sea. The scale was astonishing: the main pavilion had a floor area of about 18 000 square meters and the total complex about 35 000 square meters.

Read more: The Antonine Baths in Carthage, Tunisia

How Can I See All Of These Archaeological Sites In Tunisia?

This heritage, Tunisia's greatest wealth has been held in trust and preserved in hundreds of sites and museums from the small Punic museum in Utica to the vast collections of the prestigious National Museum of Bardo. Most Museums are closed on Mondays, whereas many on-site archeological museums and ruins are open all week. An entrance fee is usually charged and a caretaker will often act as guide. ~Tourism Tunisia

What Other Cultural Tours And Activities Can You Find In Tunisia?

  • The International Music Festival is held for long evenings in the El Jem Coliseum. The festival is held on a summer night and provides an unforgettable musical experience. Symphonic sounds collide as world renowned artists take the stage for a spectacular night under the stars.
  • Tunisia's desert near Tozeur has featured in numerous films, most notably in The English Patient and Star Wars. An increasing number of tour operators now offer desert safaris to the locations where these famous blockbuster movies were shot. For further information, contact the Tunisian National Tourist Office.~IExplore
Also check out these sites for an exclusive list of activities and travel tours.

Friday, November 12, 2010

Petra In Under 3 Minutes




It's one of my favorite archaeological sites on earth. The mysterious city of Petra was carved into the steep cliffs, lining Arabah, a valley that runs from the Dead Sea to the Gulf of Aqaba. Most remember Petra from Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade, however they probably never knew the history behind it.

Archaeological Cities of Syria


Guest Article By Ron Siojo (Expert in Societies, Culture, and Religion)

The environs west and southwest of Aleppo in northern Syria are home to the "Dead Cities" — abandoned ruins of some 700 Byzantine towns, villages and monastic settlements. These ruins are among the greatest treasuries of Byzantine architecture to be found anywhere in the ancient world.

Today, very little of Antioch survives but the Dead Cities still litter the landscape with astonishingly well-preserved basilicas, monasteries, villas and baths. Indeed, the Dead Cities of Syria provide "one of the best pictures of the world of Late Antiquity to be found anywhere." Below is the list of the Dead Cities, all of which have notable ruins of Byzantine churches.

Read More about the Dead Cities of Syria 

Picture @ Sacred Destinations

Tuesday, November 9, 2010

Anthropologists Debate: Neanderthal and Human Brains No Longer Similar


I was watching a movie today in an Anthropology class called Neanderthal The Rebirth featured on BBC. Two individual sets of bones were fused together to form an almost complete skeleton of a Neanderthal.

The legs, of course, were a bit shorter, the rib cage flares at the bottom, an indication of the lung capacity and the ability to survive cold climates.

The cranial capacity, however, was compared very closely to modern humans. A endocast was created to study the indentations or imprints left by the brain to study cognitive abilities. There was barely any debate in the mental processing abilities of both modern humans and neanderthals.



Imagine my surprise and disbelief after finding a video today stating neanderthal and human brains are not as similar as once thought.

This video explains the development and research by Svante Paabo of the neanderthal genome at the Max Plank Institution of Evolutionary Anthropology in Leipzig, Germany.

Among humans, however, the internal organization of the brain is more important for cognitive abilities than its absolute size is. The brain's internal organization depends on the tempo and mode of brain development.
Website of the Neandertal Genome project

German archaeologists recover Nazi-era ‘degenerate art’


Subway workers and archaeologists in Berlin have discovered a trove of early 20th-century art that was thought to be destroyed by the Nazi regime.

Workers building a new subway line in the German capital stumbled onto the remains of sculptures that were part of a list of ‘degenerate art’ the Nazi regime deemed too Jewish or un-German.

No one is entirely sure how the sculptures survived Nazi propagandists and the Second World War, although there is speculation that an anti-Nazi Berliner saved the works  from destruction. Der Spiegel also has a photo gallery of the works which are now housed in Berlin’s Neues Museum.

Read the entire story about  German archaeologists recover Nazi-era ‘degenerate art’


Monday, November 8, 2010

Monday Ground Up: Isla Del Sol


Isla Del Sol at Lake Titicaca in Bolivia is said to be the location where the sun and moon were born. There are 180 archaeological ruins on the island, all of which have a story and quite a history.

Where Is Isla Del Sol?

Isla Del Sol is located in Lake Titicaca in the Altiplano region of Bolivia and lies close to 12,506 feet above sea level. The island is divided into three parts, with Yumani in the south, Ch’alla in the east, and Challapampa in the north. Isla Del Sol measures 5.5 square miles and takes close to three hours to cross on foot. There’s no cars for transport.

Friday, November 5, 2010

Roman Hairstyle Archaeology




That's right ladies and gentlemen, there's archaeology for every topic you can think of. I was only looking for some sort of new archaeology footage when I stumbled upon this fascinating video about Roman hairstyles. Now gentlemen, I know this may not be a topic of interest to you, but I know many of you adore and love long hair. I know my fiance does. This may be video to pass on to your wife, girlfriend, or fiance, just in case they want to drink in the feminine hairstyles of Roman woman.

This particular style featured in the video is based upon Julia Domna from 192 CE. Empress Julia Domna was the wife of Septimius Severus, Roman Emperor from 193 to 211. Domna is highly recognizable by her hair which was long and curly and very dense. This combination made for a very large Chignon, or a large mass of hair standing out from the head, interwoven in luxurious patterns. Are you intrigued yet?

I'm off to try it myself, as my hair almost touches my hips. Wish me luck!

A Scary Archaeological Trip


No, it's not a new discovery, it was just an eye opening experience for me while I was fossil hunting today with the puppies. Like any normal day, I got on my Columbia hiking shoes (no this is not an ad, they're new and I love them *smile*), grabbed my water bottle, and headed down the trail.

I found this area brimming with fossilized bones from animals a few weeks ago and thought, why not explore the evidence a bit further. I had my trowel in hand and the dogs pulling my other arm in another direction. Why, I'm not sure. Imagine two dogs wanting nothing to do with animals bones. It's a bit bizarre to tell you truth, but to be honest, I'm not sure why there are so many in one place. There could be someone living in the forest and this is their so called pit of bones.

No sooner then I tried to start picking around, I felt like I was shot in the shoulder. I've had bee and wasp stinks, but this was worse. I could feel the pain rush down my arm and the right shoulder blade was killing me. I immediately grabbed my shoulder to try and dull the pain. I was looking behind me at the same time and saw nothing and nobody. Needless to say, I started I turned around and started running back home and I don't run.

I just got home an hour ago and looked at my back. There's a huge welt but no stinger inside the wound, as I tried to scrape it with a butter knife. I'm at a loss and a bit freaked out. Either someone doesn't want me near those bones and shot me with a pellet or it was something supernatural.

What do you think? Isn't it strange?

Thursday, November 4, 2010

Great Wall of Croatia



Leave it to RJ Evans over at Kuriositas to teach me, and I'm sure all of you, something new about the Great Wall. It's not the Great Wall of China I'm speaking of, but The Great Wall of Croatia. It's positively medieval at first glance and now I know why, as it dates to the 15th century.

Ston and its neighboring village of Mali Ston have a secret which is visible to all.  Connecting the two is a simply amazing wall, more than five kilometers in length.  The walls circle the village of Ston and then climb up the hill to reach the Pozvizd Fortress.  They then follow a narrow strip of land (an isthmus) to meet with the walls of the village of Mali Stan.
Read This Article :The Great Wall of Croatia via Kuriositas

Wednesday, November 3, 2010

Secondary Burials of Berawan


Western society views funerary practices of non-westerners as odd, bizarre, and unnecessary. However, let's turn the tables and see what the Berawan think is so bizarre about American funerary practices.

Berawan secondary burials involves a sort of storage, if you will, of the remnants of the deceased above ground in a longhouse or upon a platform in the cemetery. The family of the dead will store the corpse in a valuable glazed jar or the coffin left over from the first stage. The entire process usually “lasts at least eight months and sometimes for several years if the close kin cannot immediately afford to complete the expensive final stages.”

Read the full story about the Bizarre Berawan secondary burial @Friends revolution.


Monday, November 1, 2010

Monday Ground Up: Guide To Archaeology and Anthropology Graduate School 101


I recently attended a seminar featuring Dr. John Walker, Professor Peter Sinelli, and Dr.John Schultz from the University of Central Florida. The seminar focused on the Do's and Don'ts of applying to graduate school for archaeology and anthropology and was organized by Hominids Anonymous Anthropology Club.

On one hand it was eye opening. On the other, it was terrifying. My only advice is to take all of this information with a grain of salt, as each school is completely different in their requirements for admission. To be honest, I have a mental picture in my head of the universities I'm applying to, the path I need to get there, and the people that can help me make it happen.

Like Ancient Digger? Why Not Follow Us?


Subscribe Via RSS Feed Follow Ancient Digger on Facebook Follow Ancient Digger on Twitter Subscribe to Ancient Digger Via Email

Get widget

Search

 

Ancient Digger Archaeology Copyright © 2015 LKart Theme is Designed by Lasantha