Features From the Issue
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Features
Rites of the Scythians
Spectacular new discoveries from the Caucasus set the stage for a dramatic hilltop ritual
(Courtesy Andrey Belinski) -
Features
Franklin’s Last Voyage
After 170 years and countless searches, archaeologists have discovered a famed wreck in the frigid Arctic
(Courtesy Parks Canada, Photo: Marc-André Bernier) -
Features
Timelines
Tracking when humans, Neanderthals, and Denisovans crossed paths—and what became of their offspring
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Features
Children of Giza
Finds from a cemetery near the pyramids are illuminating the Egyptian view of youth and the afterlife
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Features
The Bard at Home
Renovations, entertainment, and grief at New Place, Shakespeare’s manor in Stratford-upon-Avon
Letter from England
Letter from England
Stronghold of the Kings in the North
Excavations at one of Britain’s most majestic castles help tell the story of an Anglo-Saxon kingdom
Artifact
Artifacts
Spanish Horseshoe
Digs & Discoveries
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Digs & Discoveries
Is it Esmeralda?
(Courtesy David Mearns) -
Digs & Discoveries
New Dates for the Oldest Cave Paintings
(Courtesy Jean Clottes, Chauvet Cave Project) -
Digs & Discoveries
Fact-Checking Lawrence of Arabia
(Copyright N.J. Saunders, Photo: Ali Badry) -
Digs & Discoveries
Etruscan Code Uncracked
(Courtesy Southern Methodist University) -
Digs & Discoveries
Naval Mystery Solved
(U.S. Naval History and Heritage Command, NOAA ONMS/Teledyne SeaBotix) -
Digs & Discoveries
Off with Their Heads
(Courtesy York Archaeological Trust) -
Digs & Discoveries
Cursing the Competition
(Courtesy Jessica Lamont) -
Digs & Discoveries
Proof in the Prints
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Digs & Discoveries
Fit for a War God
(© Guillaume Gernez / Mission archéologique française en Oman central) -
Digs & Discoveries
A Life Story
(© Zona Arqueológica Caral) -
Digs & Discoveries
A Villa under the Garden
(Courtesy Aerial Filming Services Ltd.) -
Digs & Discoveries
Iceland’s Young Migrant
(Courtesy Ívar Brynjólfsson, National Museum of Iceland)
Off the Grid
Off the Grid July/August 2016
Saint Pierre Cathedral, Switzerland
Around the World
INDIA
INDIA: At Ellora Caves, a complex of more than 30 rock-carved temples in Maharashtra, among countless surviving statues and reliefs, are the remains of frescoes on some walls and ceilings. They’ve survived more than 1,500 years in part, the authors of a new study believe, because hemp—cannabis, known as bhang in India—was mixed with the plaster. The composite material, called hempcrete, can provide strength, thermal insulation, fire resistance, pest resistance, and sound absorption.
HONG KONG
HONG KONG: Despite World War II and the city’s celebrated modern development, a few fragments of old Hong Kong still survive, such as a recently identified stone marker. It is engraved “B.O. No. 4,” which refers to the “Board of Ordnance,” the British military group responsible for mapping prior to 1855. The position of the stone, in a resort village that was once the site of the British barracks, was confirmed on an 1845 map. It dates to the earliest years of British occupation following the First Opium War (1839–1842). —Samir S. Patel
NEPAL
NEPAL: In the Samdzong tomb complex in Upper Mustang, beside a gold and silver funerary mask, were several textiles that are the subject of a new analysis. They include separate pieces made of wool and horsehair, as well as silk, colored with a variety of organic dyes. Most intriguing was that silk wasn’t produced locally at the time, around 1,500 years ago, which suggests that the area was not isolated as once thought, but had connections with the Silk Road, and that locals ably combined local products with imports from India and China. —Samir S. Patel