Features From the Issue
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Features
The Ugarit Archives
Thousands of cuneiform tablets written in a distinctive script tell the dramatic story of a Bronze Age merchant city in Syria
(Dick Osseman/ Wikimedia Commons) -
Features
Autobiography of a Maya Ambassador
A grand monument and a humble burial chronicle the changing fortunes of a career diplomat
(Justin Kerr, K-5763, Justin Kerr Maya Vase Archive, Dumbarton Oaks, Trustees for Harvard University, Washington, D.C.) -
Features
Rise of the Kings of Tonga
By combining excavation and oral history, archaeologists are discovering how a dynasty of chiefs united a Polynesian archipelago
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Features
Pompeii's Urban Oasis
Newly restored frescoes reveal an unexpected garden refuge
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Features
Rediscovering Archaic America
The surprising history of eastern North America’s early hunter-gatherers
Letter from Alaska
Letter from Alaska
The Cold Winds of War
A little-known World War II campaign in the Aleutian Islands left behind an undisturbed battlefield strewn with weapons and materiel
Artifact
Artifacts
Egyptian Copper Tools
Digs & Discoveries
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Digs & Discoveries
A Challenging World
(Courtesy Yoli Schwartz/Israel Antiquities Authority) -
Digs & Discoveries
The Spider's on the Wall
(Feren Castillo) -
Digs & Discoveries
Mirror, Mirror
(Courtesy Shaanxi Academy of Archaeology) -
Digs & Discoveries
Return to Sender
(Courtesy the Unlocking History Research Group archive) -
Digs & Discoveries
The Copper Standard
(William Reardon and Robin Mueller) -
Digs & Discoveries
Red Carpet Treatment
(CPA Media Pte Ltd/Alamy Stock Photo) -
Digs & Discoveries
Buddhist Retreat
(Courtesy ASI) -
Digs & Discoveries
Tubman's Training Ground
(Photo by Tim Pratt / Maryland Department of Transportation) -
Digs & Discoveries
Anchors Aweigh
(Keith Cockerill) -
Digs & Discoveries
In the Anatolian Arena
(Courtesy of Sedat Akkurnaz/Aydın Provincial Directorate of Culture and Tourism) -
Digs & Discoveries
Lost Egyptian City
(Egypt's Ministry of Tourism & Antiquities) -
Digs & Discoveries
Laws of the Land
(University of Bristol) -
Digs & Discoveries
Bathing at the Bar
(Alvaro Jimenez)
Off the Grid
Off the Grid July/August 2021
Zakros, Greece
Around the World
AUSTRALIA
AUSTRALIA: The boomerang may be Australia’s most recognizable cultural artifact. After being hurled, the crescent-shaped hardwood objects will, hypothetically, return to the thrower. While Aboriginal communities have been using boomerangs for hunting and fighting for millennia, new research indicates they had other purposes as well. Microscopic analysis of wear patterns on more than 100 boomerangs from sites across the continent suggests they were frequently used to shape stone tools. They could also have been used for making fire or playing music, or as digging implements.
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SAUDI ARABIA
SAUDI ARABIA: An aerial survey recorded more than 1,000 enigmatic rectangular complexes scattered throughout the deserts of northwest Saudi Arabia. First appearing around 7,000 years ago, these huge structures, known as mustatils, are among the earliest known large-scale stone monuments found anywhere, predating even Egypt’s pyramids and Stonehenge. Scholars are unsure why they were constructed, but suggest they were used for religious ceremonies, since the remains of horned animals, especially cattle, are known to have been ritually deposited within them.
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SOUTH AFRICA
SOUTH AFRICA: New dating of sediments from the Kalahari Desert’s Wonderwerk Cave suggests the shelter may be the oldest home ever inhabited by our human ancestors. Researchers believe the cave was occupied as long as 1.8 million years ago—the presence of hominins is indicated by the remains of primitive stone tools. Burned bone and ashes also found at the site may be the earliest known evidence of deliberate use of fire, around a million years ago.