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Study Reexamines Remains from Spain's Gran Dolina Cave


Study Reexamines Remains from Spain’s Gran Dolina Cave
BURGOS, SPAIN
Live Sciencereports that the remains known as “The Boy of Gran Dolina” actually belonged to a young girl, based upon microscopic dental analysis which has been used to identify sex in other human species. The remains of 22 individuals, discovered in 1994 in Grand Dolina Cave, which is located in northern Spain’s Atapuerca Mountains, have been identified as
Homo antecessor, a species that lived in Europe between 1.2 million and 800,000 years ago. But the remains are highly fragmented, perhaps because they had been cannibalized, and belonged to pre-adolescents, making it difficult to determine their sex. Older children, however, often have some adult teeth. Individual “H1” was thought to be a male who died at about 13 years of age, while individual “H3,” dubbed The Boy of Gran Dolina, was thought to be about 11 years old. Cecilia García-Campos of Spain’s National Center for R ....

Castillay Leóp , Cecilia Garc , Gran Dolina , Research On Human Evolution , Spain National Center , Live Sciencereports , Grand Dolina Cave , Atapuerca Mountains , National Center , Human Evolution , Oldest Footprints , சிசிலியா கர்க் , கிரான் டோலினா , ஆராய்ச்சி ஆன் மனிதன் பரிணாமம் , ஸ்பெயின் தேசிய மையம் , தேசிய மையம் , மனிதன் பரிணாமம் , பழமையான கால்தடங்கள் ,

CT Scan Detects Pharaoh's Fatal Wounds - Archaeology Magazine

CT Scan Detects Pharaoh's Fatal Wounds - Archaeology Magazine
archaeology.org - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from archaeology.org Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Al Qahirah , Cairo University , Al Jizah , Sahar Saleem , Egypt Seqenenre Taa , Live Sciencereports , Seqenenre Tao , Radiologist Sahar Saleem , Seqenenre Taa , Foreign Lands , கெய்ரோ பல்கலைக்கழகம் , சஹார் சலீம் , வெளிநாட்டு நிலங்கள் ,

Five Longswords Discovered in Sardis - Archaeology Magazine


Longswords and Ancient Dog Print Discovered in Sardis
CAMBRIDGE, MASSACHUSETTS
Live Sciencereports that five Roman-style longswords were discovered in a 1,500-year-old house located in central Sardis, western Turkey’s ancient capital of the kingdom of Lydia, by Harvard University s Archaeological Expedition of Sardis under the direction of Nicholas Cahill of the University of Wisconsin–Madison. Only three swords had previously been found in the city. Buckles and a lead seal also recovered from the house suggest the residents may have been connected to the military or the city’s civil authorities, according to Vanessa Rousseau of the University of St. Thomas. She noted that the house had been furnished with wall paintings that mimic draped curtains and polychrome marble, and terracotta floor tiles that were imprinted before firing with a dog’s paw prints and finger-drawn outlines of birds resembling chickens or ducks. The house had been occupied for approxim ....

United Kingdom , United States , Vanessa Rousseau , Nicholas Cahill , University Of Wisconsin , University Of St , Harvard University Archaeological Expedition Of Sardis , Live Sciencereports , Harvard University , Archaeological Expedition , ஒன்றுபட்டது கிஂக்டம் , ஒன்றுபட்டது மாநிலங்களில் , வனேசா ரூஸ்ஸோ , நிக்கோலஸ் காஹில் , பல்கலைக்கழகம் ஆஃப் விஸ்கான்சின் , பல்கலைக்கழகம் ஆஃப் ஸ்டம்ப் , ஹார்வர்ட் பல்கலைக்கழகம் தொல்பொருள் பயணம் ஆஃப் சர்திஸ் , ஹார்வர்ட் பல்கலைக்கழகம் , தொல்பொருள் பயணம் ,

"Counterfeit" Bronze Age Currency Analyzed - Archaeology Magazine


“Counterfeit” Bronze Age Currency Analyzed
HAIFA, ISRAEL
Live Sciencereports that while a student at the University of Haifa, Tzilla Eshel analyzed the chemical composition of 35 silver hoards unearthed in Israel and dated to the Bronze Age, when the region, then known as Canaan, was ruled by Egypt. The metal, which was valued by its weight and used as currency, is not naturally found in the region. Eshel determined that items in eight of the hoards dated to the end of the period some 3,200 years ago were actually made of copper alloys coated in a layer silver. “There was a shortage of silver, probably related to the Late Bronze Age collapse,” Eshel said. She thinks the creation of silver-covered copper alloys may have started as forgery or counterfeiting, but may have become an accepted practice. “I don’t think you can produce silver-copper-arsenic cores for over 250 years and that no one would notice, because it corrodes [by turning green] over time,� ....

University Of Haifa , H Efa , Tzilla Eshel , Live Sciencereports , Bronze Age , Late Bronze Age , பல்கலைக்கழகம் ஆஃப் ஹைஃபா , ஏச் எபா , வெண்கலம் வாழ்நாள் , தாமதமாக வெண்கலம் வாழ்நாள் ,