Features From the Issue
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(Official U.S. Navy Photograph, National Archives)
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Features
Hoards of the Vikings
Evidence of trade, diplomacy, and vast wealth on an unassuming island in the Baltic Sea
(Gabriel Hildebrand/The Royal Coin Cabinet, Sweden) -
Features
Fire in the Fens
A short-lived settlement provides an unparalleled view of Bronze Age life in eastern England
(Andrew Testa/New York Times/Redux) -
Features
Seeing Beauty in the Mundane
Looking for traces of a celebrated but unusual artist in suburban Idaho
Letter from Laos
Letter from Laos
A Singular Landscape
New technology is enabling archaeologists to explore a vast but little-studied mortuary complex in war-damaged Laos
Artifact
Artifacts
Neolithic Snowshoe
Digs & Discoveries
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Digs & Discoveries
Proteins Solve a Hominin Puzzle
(Courtesy Marian Vanhaeren) -
Digs & Discoveries
A Pharaoh’s Last Fleet
(Courtesy Josef Wegner) -
Digs & Discoveries
The Curse of a Medieval English Well
(Courtesy Historic England) -
Digs & Discoveries
Discovering Terror
(Courtesy Parks Canada) -
Digs & Discoveries
Hungry Minds
(Courtesy Roger Seymour/University of Adelaide/South Australian Museum) -
Digs & Discoveries
Guide to the Afterlife
(Courtesy Seokdang Museum of Dong-A University) -
Digs & Discoveries
Japan’s Early Anglers
(Courtesy Okinawa Prefectural Museum Art Museum) -
Digs & Discoveries
A Removable Feast
(Courtesy Bob Dawe, Royal Alberta Museum) -
Digs & Discoveries
Blue Collar in Ancient Peru
(Courtesy Lauren Badams) -
Digs & Discoveries
The Monkey Effect
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Digs & Discoveries
Figure of Distinction
(Photo: Jason Quinlan, Courtesy Çatalhöyük Research Project) -
Digs & Discoveries
Death by Boomerang
(Courtesy Michael Westaway)
Off the Grid
Off the Grid January/February 2017
Rogers Island, New York
Around the World
MICRONESIA
MICRONESIA: The ancient city of Nan Madol—composed of artificial basalt islands surrounded by canals, and called the “Venice of the Pacific”—was one of the first in Oceania to be ruled by a chief. Using uranium-thorium dating, researchers found that construction of a monumental tomb, the size of a football field, began there in 1180 and was completed by 1200. This pushes back the establishment of the capital and its chiefdom by 100 years. —Samir S. Patel
CHINA
CHINA: We can’t say which side of the marijuana legalization debate the resident of a tomb in the Jiayi Cemetery would have been on, but it’s clear that the plant carried special ritual or medicinal importance to his people. His body had been wrapped in a “shroud” of 13 cannabis plants, fanning out across his torso, around 2,500 years ago. Most of the flowers had been removed, but those that remain suggest he was buried in the late summer. —Samir S. Patel
TANZANIA
TANZANIA: There are various places in Africa where ancient human footprints have been found, but none contain as many as the volcanic mudflat of Engare Sero, where researchers have recently catalogued more than 400 dating to between 10,000 and 19,000 years ago. Two individuals appear to have been jogging, and there were two groups of mostly women and children traveling in different directions. It’s thought that even more footprints lie under nearby sand dunes. —Samir S. Patel