Artifacts from Ur Discovered in Bristol

News June 20, 2014

SHARE:
(Courtesy University of Bristol)

BRISTOL, ENGLAND—A wooden box filled with pottery, seeds, and animal bones that may have come from Sir Leonard Woolley’s excavations of Ur in the 1920s and ‘30s has been found in the University of Bristol’s Department of Archaeology and Anthropology, in an area slated for a new state-of-the-art radiocarbon dating facility. The items turned out to be the remains of food offerings left in a royal tomb at least 4,500 years ago. “The remaining mystery is how this material came to be at Bristol in the first place. The environmental remains themselves were published in 1978 in Journal of Archaeological Science. The authors of that study were based at the Institute of Archaeology, London, and at the University of Southampton, and none of them had any known connection to the University of Bristol that might explain how the material came to reside here. If anyone can shed light on this mystery, we’d would love to hear from them,” said archaeologist Tamar Hodos. The artifacts will be housed at the British Museum, one of the sponsors of the original excavation. 

  • Features May/June 2014

    Searching for the Comanche Empire

    In a deep gorge in New Mexico, archaeologists have discovered a unique site that tells the story of a nomadic confederacy's rise to power in the heart of North America

    Read Article
    (Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington, DC/Art Resource, NY)
  • Letter from Philadelphia May/June 2014

    City Garden

    The unlikely preservation of thousands of years of history in a modern urban oasis

    Read Article
    (Courtesy URS Corporation, Photo: Kimberly Morrell)
  • Artifacts May/June 2014

    Roman Ritual Deposit

    Read Article
    (Archaeological Exploration of Sardis)
  • Digs & Discoveries May/June 2014

    A Brief Glimpse into Early Rome

    Read Article
    (Courtesy Dan Diffendale/Sant'Omobono Project)