Features From the Issue
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Features
When Isis Was Queen
At the ancient Egyptian temples of Philae, Nubians gave new life to a vanishing religious tradition
(Waj/Shutterstock) -
Features
Italian Master Builders
A 3,500-year-old ritual pool reflects a little-known culture’s agrarian prowess
(Ministero della Cultura) -
Features
Ghost Tracks of White Sands
Scientists are uncovering fossilized footprints in the New Mexico desert that show how humans and Ice Age animals shared the landscape
(Jerry Redfern) -
Features
Piecing Together Maya Creation Stories
Thousands of mural fragments from the city of San Bartolo illustrate how the Maya envisioned their place in the universe
(Digital image by Heather Hurst) -
Features
Gaul's University Town
New excavations have revealed the wealth and prestige of an ancient center of learning
(Digital image by Heather Hurst)
Letter from Ghana
Letter from Ghana
Life Outside the Castle
At Christiansborg Castle, a community that embodied the complexity of the transatlantic slave trade is being uncovered by descendants of those who created it
Artifact
Artifacts
Middle Bronze Age Flask
Digs & Discoveries
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Digs & Discoveries
Identifying the Unidentified
(© MOLA) -
Digs & Discoveries
In Full Color
(Courtesy Pedro Saura) -
Digs & Discoveries
Typing Time
(Cultural Heritage Administration) -
Digs & Discoveries
Otto's Church
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Digs & Discoveries
An Irish Idol
(John Channing) -
Digs & Discoveries
A Family's Final Resting Place
(Courtesy Jinan Institute of Archaeology) -
Digs & Discoveries
A Place of Their Own
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Digs & Discoveries
A Trip to Venice
(Antonio Calandriello and Giuseppe D'Acunto (Università Iuav di Venezia)) -
Digs & Discoveries
Salty Snack
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Digs & Discoveries
The Age of Glass
(Jason Urbanus; Chapter of Canterbury Cathedral) -
Digs & Discoveries
China's New Human Species
(Wei Gao) -
Digs & Discoveries
Mesopotamian War Memorial
(Courtesy The Euphrates Salvage Project)
Off the Grid
Off the Grid November/December 2021
Bodie, California
Around the World
JAPAN
JAPAN: The remains of a large colonnaded building were unearthed at the site of the former Heijo Palace in Nara. The building dates to the 8th century A.D., during the Nara Period when the city of Heijo-kyu was Japan’s capital. The structure was likely part of a residence used by emperors and the imperial family, particularly the empress Koken, also called Shotoku (r. A.D. 749–758 and A.D. 765–770).
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CHINA
CHINA: Microfossil residue analysis of ceramic cups found in a 9,000-year-old burial mound at Qiaotou indicates that the dead were sometimes commemorated through ritual beer-drinking ceremonies. This is the earliest evidence of such activity. The cups, which are also the oldest examples of painted pottery in the world, were found to have once contained an alcoholic concoction made from rice, a grain called Job’s tears, and unknown tubers. The sophisticated fermentation process was aided by the inclusion of a specialized mold starter.
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EGYPT
EGYPT: New underwater exploration at Thonis-Heracleion located a rare Ptolemaic-era military galley. The 80-foot-long vessel is only the second of its kind found. It was moored next to the city’s temple of Amun when a 2nd-century B.C. earthquake caused the structure’s stone blocks to collapse onto the ship and sink it. The city was one of the most important Mediterranean ports in Egypt before a series of apocalyptic earthquakes plunged it entirely into the sea.