Features From the Issue
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(Image copyright © The Metropolitan Museum of Art/Art Resource, NY)
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Features
A Residence Fit for a President
New evidence revises a long-held belief about James Monroe’s home
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Features
Looking Beyond the Hillforts
A unique settlement in southwestern England is changing archaeologists’ views about how Iron Age people lived 2,000 years ago
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Features
The First Australians
The story of the continent’s earliest human arrivals is being revealed at a rock shelter in remote and challenging territory
Letter From Peru
Artifact
Artifacts
Bone Rosary Bead
Digs & Discoveries
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Digs & Discoveries
Ka-Ching!
(Courtesy Jersey Heritage) -
Digs & Discoveries
While You Are Waiting
(Pasquale Sorrentino) -
Digs & Discoveries
A Dangerous Island
(Pete Marshall - Places/Alamy Stock Photo) -
Digs & Discoveries
House Rules
(Courtesy Elsa Redmond, American Museum of Natural History) -
Digs & Discoveries
Renaissance Melody
(Courtesy Françoise Labaune-Jean, Inrap) -
Digs & Discoveries
Take Me Out to the Ball Game
(Courtesy © LBI ArchPro, 7reasons) -
Digs & Discoveries
Tomb Couture
(Courtesy Chinese Cultural Relics/http://www.eastviewpress.com/Journals/CulturalRelics.aspx) -
Digs & Discoveries
Not So Pearly Whites
(Courtesy Stefano Benazzi, University of Bologna) -
Digs & Discoveries
Late Paleolithic Masterpieces
(Courtesy Nicolas Naudinot) -
Digs & Discoveries
Afterlife on the Nile
(Photo: Patricia Mora, © University of Jaén) -
Digs & Discoveries
Knight Watch
(Courtesy Michael Lavin, Jamestown Rediscovery) -
Digs & Discoveries
The Grand Army Diet
(Courtesy Rimantas Jankauskas, Vilnius University) -
Digs & Discoveries
Angry Birds
(iStockphoto)
Off the Grid
Off the Grid July/August 2017
Gamla Uppsala, Uppsala, Sweden
Around the World
NEW ZEALAND
NEW ZEALAND: The site of a future convention center in Christchurch is shedding light on the lives of the city’s first European settlers. Apparently, even back then, men were concerned with hair loss. Among the hundreds of artifacts found at the site in rubbish pits and deposits dating to the mid-19th century was a container of Russian Bears Grease. The quirky pharmaceutical product purportedly aided hair growth and prevented baldness—the underlying theory being that because bears were hairy, their fat could stimulate hair growth for humans. —Jason Urbanus
MALAYSIA
MALAYSIA: An area that was once part of the moat that surrounded Fort Cornwallis in George Town proved to contain an array of artifacts dating back to the colonial era, including coins, porcelain, ceramics, plates, and glasses. The fort was originally built in 1793 at the behest of the British East India Company, and the moat was added in 1804 for extra security against a possible French attack. It was filled in during the 1920s to curb mosquito breeding during a malaria outbreak. —Jason Urbanus
TAIWAN
TAIWAN: Until recently, little was known about the Spanish colony of San Salvador de Isla Hermosa, which was founded on Heping Dao in 1626. However, current work is finally exposing parts of the early settlement, including the foundations of a church or convent and an adjacent cemetery. One of the burials, an adult male with his hands folded in prayer, is believed to be the earliest European Christian-style interment in the Asia-Pacific region. —Jason Urbanus