Features From the Issue
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Features November/December 2023
China's River of Gold
Excavations in Sichuan Province reveal the lost treasure of an infamous seventeenth-century warlord
(Courtesy Liu Zhiyan) -
Features November/December 2023
Assyrian Women of Letters
4,000-year-old cuneiform tablets illuminate the personal lives of Mesopotamian businesswomen
(Attraction Art/Adobe Stock) -
Features November/December 2023
Worshipping a Forbidden Goddess
A Roman noblewoman’s devotion to Isis outlasted even an emperor’s ban on foreign cults
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Features November/December 2023
Paleolithic Pathfinders
Around 55,000 years ago, a resourceful band of modern humans made a home in southern France
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Features November/December 2023
Who Were the Goths?
Investigating the mythic origins of the Roman Empire’s ultimate adversary
Letter from El Salvador
Letter from El Salvador
Uneasy Allies
Archaeologists discover a long-forgotten capital where Indigenous peoples and Spanish colonists arrived at a fraught coexistence
Artifact
Artifacts
Sculpture of a Fist
Digs & Discoveries
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Digs & Discoveries
The Benin Bronzes’ Secret Ingredient
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Digs & Discoveries
The Medusa of Mérida
(Consortium of the Monumental City of Mérida) -
Digs & Discoveries
A Horse Is a Horse?
(University of Tübingen, Ria Litzenberg) -
Digs & Discoveries
Sea God’s Sanctum
(Archaeological Park of Paestum and Velia) -
Digs & Discoveries
Child’s Play
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Digs & Discoveries
A Stitch in Time
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Digs & Discoveries
Trading on Their Looks
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Digs & Discoveries
Imperial Datebook
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Digs & Discoveries
Island Commander
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Digs & Discoveries
Anglo-Saxon Style Marker
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Digs & Discoveries
More Images from Digs & Discoveries
Off the Grid
Off the Grid November/December 2023
Plum Bayou Mounds
Around the World
PERU
The pre-Inca Chocorvos people living high in the Andes hundreds of years ago knew how to make noise on the dance floor. At the site of Viejo Sangayaico, researchers located an unusual platform that measured 32 feet across. It was constructed of different subsoil layers and was partially hollowed so it would produce drumlike sounds when stepped on. Researchers believe that dancers would stomp in unison during celebrations to re-create the sound of thunder as a way to venerate the local mountain deities.
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MICHIGAN
Divers recovered the engine of a P-39 Airacobra that crashed into Lake Huron in 1944 during a WWII training mission. The airplane was flown by 2nd Lt. Frank Moody, who was a member of the Tuskegee Airmen, the famed all-Black flying unit. Although most Tuskegee pilots were stationed in Alabama, 2nd Lt. Moody had been sent to Michigan for advanced training. He was conducting an exercise when his guns malfunctioned, causing irreparable damage to the plane’s propellers and dooming his flight.
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KAZAKHSTAN
A unique Bronze Age pyramid was unearthed at the Kyrykungir complex in the Abai Region. The structure, which has six sides, each measuring 42 feet long, is one of the few monuments of its kind ever found in the Central Asian steppe. The abundance of horse bones around the structure and the many images of horses that appear on its walls suggest that the site was a center of worship dedicated to a horse cult around 4,000 years ago.
Related Content
Slideshow: A Paleolithic Crossroads
Enjoy these additional images from Grotte Mandrin, a rock shelter in southern France's Rhône Valley, where, researchers have found, Homo sapiens briefly settled around 54,000 years ago.
Slideshow: Roman Altars to an Egyptian Goddess
Enjoy this selection of images from Caska Cove on Croatia's Island of Pag, which was once the site of the Roman settlement of Cissa. There, a first-century A.D. Roman noblewoman named Calpurnia erected four limestone altars dedicated to the Egyptian goddess Isis.