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Discoblog

Posts Tagged ‘archaeology’

Newer Entries »

160-Year-Old Soup Can Shows Arctic Explorers Were Slurping Lead

Franklin220It’s amazing what artifacts you can find buried in the ice. (No I’m not talking about that leftover turkey that’s been in your freezer since last Thanksgiving. Though if you consider that an historical find, more power to you.)

Last month Discoblog brought you the story of the century-old whiskey that British explorer Ernest Shackleton left on Antarctica, which New Zealanders recovered and plan to replicate. Now scientists have analyzed a soup can found in the Canadian Arctic that dates to around the time of the famous Franklin Expedition, and could point to how its members met their doom.

(more…)

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December 16th, 2009 Tags: archaeology, Arctic & Antarctic, food, history
by Andrew Moseman in Food, Nutrition, & More Food | 5 Comments | RSS feed | Trackback >

For Early Europeans, Cannibalism Was One Perk of Victory

cannibal pumpkinWhat was eating the earliest Europeans? Their rivals, apparently. Human remains up to 800,000 years old have been found in an archaeological cave site in northern Spain. They reveal that early Europeans killed and ate their adversaries, and took a special liking to the flesh of children and adolescents.

The abundant food and water available in the area indicate that the cannibalistic practice was not one of necessity. AFP tells us:

A study of the remains revealed that they turned to cannibalism to feed themselves and not as part of a ritual, that they ate their rivals after killing them, mostly children and adolescents. “It is the first well-documented case of cannibalism in the history of humanity, which does not mean that it is the oldest,” said [project co-director Jose Maria Bermudez de Castro]. The remains discovered in the caves “appeared scattered, broken, fragmented, mixed with other animals such as horses, deer, rhinoceroses, all kinds of animals caught in hunting” and eaten by humans, he said. “This gives us an idea of cannibalism as a type [of] gastronomy, and not as a ritual”….

[Archaeologists] found water and food in abundance, could hunt wild boar, horses, [and] deer, “which means that they did not practice cannibalism through a lack of food. They killed their rivals and used the meat,” he said. “We have also discovered two levels that contain cannibalised remains, which means that it was not a one-off thing, but continued through time,” he said. “Another interesting aspect…is that most of the 11 individuals that we have identified” as victims “were children or adolescents.”

Lends a whole new meaning to “the sweet taste of victory.”

Related Content:
Discoblog: Caribbean Bowls Reveal Ancient…Drug Habit?
Discoblog: Archaeological Surprise: Grave Site Full of Phallic Figurines

Image: flickr / stu_spivack

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June 29th, 2009 Tags: anthropology, archaeology, cannibalism
by Allison Bond in Where We Came From & Where We're Going | 8 Comments | RSS feed | Trackback >

Superglue: Stone Age Humans Beat Us to It

ochre.jpgSuperglue may be a modern convenience, but it might not be such a recent invention. Using Stone Age materials, South Africa-based researchers have recreated a glue that they suspect people at that time made to hold their tools together.

Red ochre dye once thought by archaeologists to only serve a decorative or symbolic purpose in present-day South Africa 70,000 years ago, may have actually been the magic ingredient in a Stone Age recipe for natural superglue.

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May 12th, 2009 Tags: archaeology, extinction
by Rachel Cernansky in Where We Came From & Where We're Going | 5 Comments | RSS feed | Trackback >

Caribbean Bowls Reveal Ancient…Drug Habit?

caribbeanIf you were setting sail for foreign lands, perhaps never to return home, what would you take with you? The first settlers of the Caribbean Islands, when faced with this decision, chose to take their bongs, which they passed down as heirlooms to future generations.

Researchers at North Carolina State University have dated the ceramic inhaling bowls and snuffing tubes found on the island of Carriacou to several centuries before the island was first inhabited—meaning the bowls were brought by settlers from South America or neighboring islands, and were already heirlooms when they made the trip.

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October 21st, 2008 Tags: archaeology, drugs
by Nina Bai in Where We Came From & Where We're Going | 4 Comments | RSS feed | Trackback >

Archaeological Surprise: Grave Site Full of Phallic Figurines

phallusArchaeologists excavating a burial site near Nazareth dating back to between 6750 and 8500 B.C. found the area littered with shells, axes, and other artifacts—no surprise there. But something else also caught their attention: a high number of phallic figurines.

It’s not unusual to find reproductive-themed artifacts in grave sites from this period, says study leader Nigel Goring-Morris of the Hebrew University. But this period of history, not so long after the agricultural revolution, typically produced more female figurines, associated with the fertility of the land. Even though most of the 65 people buried in this 10 meters by 20 meters plot were young men, he says, the finding is an odd one.

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September 8th, 2008 Tags: archaeology
by Andrew Moseman in The World According to Darwin | 7 Comments | RSS feed | Trackback >

Worst Science Article of the Week: Did Women Wield Power in Greece 3,500 Years Ago?

The Mycenean lady, from the Athens Archaeological MuseumAncient Greek societies were, like the vast majority of other societies, patriarchal. Even as Athens moved toward an early version of democratic government around 500 B.C., men ran the show. But according to an article published on Sunday in the British newspaper The Observer, everything we knew about Greek gender relations was wrong.

The Observer article, titled “DNA Explodes Greek Myth About Women,” reports on a Manchester University study of DNA that dates back to the Mycenaean civilization from around the 16th or 17th century B.C., more than a millennium before the classical Athens of Socrates, Pericles, and Plato. What the scientists actually found through DNA analysis was that two skeletons located in a royal grave together were brother and sister, not husband and wife as archaeologists had previously thought.

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June 4th, 2008 Tags: archaeology, Worst Science Article of the Week
by Andrew Moseman in The World According to Darwin, Worst Science Article of the Week | 4 Comments | RSS feed | Trackback >

Hide the Women and Children! Researchers Dig Up Viking DNA

Vikings lived in Norway, Sweden, and Denmark a thousand years agoThe standard Viking funeral involved being burned in a pyre at sea. But luckily for scientists, a few marauding Norsemen were left behind, buried in the ground. Now their skeletons can be examined in detail, and might even show us what human DNA looked like a millennium ago.

A team of scientists led by Jørgen Dissing at the University of Copenhagen have extracted authentic Viking DNA from teeth that were still sitting in the jaws of the thousand-year-old corpses. The DNA samples came from a burial site on the Danish island of Funen which dates from A.D. 700 to 1000.

(more…)

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May 28th, 2008 Tags: archaeology, genetics, human evolution
by Andrew Moseman in The World According to Darwin | No comments | RSS feed | Trackback >

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