Codex Subtext

Digs & Discoveries November/December 2016

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Trenches Mexico Selden Natural

In the mid-1500s, a family of the Mixtec people in Oaxaca, Mexico, recorded their historic deeds in a book now known as the Selden Codex. But books were scarce at the time, so they took an old text, covered it with white gesso, and then painted their new narrative on top. Now researchers in the Netherlands and the United Kingdom have been able to use a technique called hyperspectral imaging to see parts of the older text without damaging the newer one. The images are not sharp enough to read or date the glyphs, but several identifiable figures have emerged, including a line of spear-carrying men possibly marching off to war.

  • Artifacts November/December 2016

    18th-Century Men's Buckle Shoe

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    (Courtesy Dave Webb: Cambridge Archaeological Unit)
  • Around the World November/December 2016

    SOLOMON ISLANDS

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    (Courtesy Nina Kononenko)
  • Digs & Discoveries November/December 2016

    Piltdown’s Lone Forger

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    (Arthur Claude (1867–1951) / Geological Society, London, UK / Bridgeman Images)
  • Features November/December 2016

    Samhain Revival

    Looking for the roots of Halloween in Ireland’s Boyne Valley

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    (Courtesy Stephen Davis, University College Dublin)