Thursday, April 08, 2004

SOrry about some of the formatting problems. BlogSpot is being a little weird today. Or Notepad is.

Controversy revisits Shroud of Turin

A documentary on the Shroud of Turin suggests the cloth, a religious relic once
believed to be the burial shroud of Christ, might be authentic, and some archaeologists are
crying foul.

Experts have widely considered the 14-foot-long linen sheet, which has been kept since 1578
in a cathedral in Turin, Italy, a forgery since carbon-dating tests were performed in 1988.
Those tests placed its origin at A.D.1300.

But Secrets of the Dead: Shroud of Christ (PBS, tonight, 8 ET/PT, check local listings),
presents evidence that narrator Liev Schreiber says is "making it possible it was indeed the
shroud of Christ"


I didn't even know this was on last night and just happened to channel surf to it (errr,
only because Enterprise was a rerun). This is one of those things that will never die
because there will always be someone around to hype it up (note: I am on the side of it
being a medieval forgery). Nevertheless, here are some related links:

Original Nature paper describing the C-14 tests that gave the medieval date.

Walter McCrone on the composition of image and the supposed problems with the C-14 dating.

For those with subscriptions via universities or other institutions, two papers in The
Journal Of Archaeological Science
regarding the C-14 dating:

Kouznetsov et al.: Effects of fires and biofractionation. . .

Jull, Donahue, and Damon commenting on Kouznetsov et al.

Couple more from Radiocarbon on the fire/contamination issue:

Attempt to Affect the Apparent 14C Age of Cotton by Scorching in a CO2 Environment

An Experiment to Refute the Likelihood of Cellulose Carboxylation

Metro Briefing (NYC)

TRENTON: STATE LANDMARKS PLANTATION SITE A five-acre site where archaeologists unearthed evidence of a northern slave plantation that the Marquis de Lafayette and George Washington visited has been granted state landmark status, officials said yesterday. Known as the Beverwyck site, near Parsippany and Troy Hills, it was a parking lot scheduled for expansion in the late 1990's when workers came across artifacts. Archaeologists eventually found slave shackles, buttons from Revolutionary War-era uniforms and other items that tied the site to a 2,000-acre mid-18th-century plantation known as Beverwyck. The Department of Environmental Protection plans to recommend the property for federal landmark status as well.Stacy Albin (NYT)


That's the whole article, it's down the page a bit.

News from BangladeshGovt to preserve Narsingdi site

The government will preserve the archaeological site in Narsingdi where the country's oldest road, dating back to 450 BC, was unearthed last month.

State Minister for Cultural Affairs Selima Rahman assured the excavators of this during her visit there yesterday, when they asked her for immediate government steps to preserve the site.

Selima hailed the excavation team of Jahangirnagar University (JU) Department of Archaeology for its epoch-making work 'in quest of the country's root' and for unravelling further evidences of the region's glorious past.

"This findings will help us know better our thousands of years-old history and make us proud of our civilisation," Selima wrote in the visitors' book.


And still more from Bangladesh Archaeological sites in disarray

Country's archaeological sites are poorly maintained as the Department of Archaeology under the Ministry of Cultural Affairs is limping due to fund crisis and manpower shortage.

Important archaeological sites and monuments such as Mount of Raja Harishchandra in Savar and Roelbari in Netrokona are left without conservation although digging was done there more than 10 years ago.

The department also failed to conserve the largest bronze statue of Buddha found at Bhoj Raja's house in Mainamati. Famous archaeological sites in the capital like Bara Katara and Chhoto Katara and Sat Gombuj Mosque also lack proper maintenance.


Worship site indicates people's rich spiritual life 7,400 years ago

A worship site discovered in the Gaomiao ashes in central China's Hunan province indicates the people there enjoyed a rich spiritual life 7,400 years ago, making it the oldest religious site discovered so far in China, according to archeologists.

Located at west Hunan's Hongjiang city, the Gaomiao ashes is one of the well-preserved sites of the Neolithic age.

The provincial archaeological institution organized an excavation at the 15,000-sq-m historical site from February to March, and discovered sites built for worship together with a number of utensils used in the worship, like white gallipots and ivory engravings.


More from Iraq Cracks in ruined vault of Iraq's ancient Ctesiphon palace

CTESIPHON, Iraq: Long deserted by tourists, the ruined vault of Iraq's ancient Ctesiphon palace, which boasts the highest single-span brick arch in the world, is developing worrisome cracks although experts say it is unlikely to collapse.

Located on the northeast bank of the Tigris River, 30 kilometers (20 miles)south of Baghdad, Ctesiphon was founded on the site of an older town, Opis, in the second century BC by Parthian King Mithridates.

The site was once one of the most popular tourist destinations in a country which is the cradle of many civilizations.

"There were busloads of tourists coming. Today we hardly get 100 visitors a week," said Wadeeh Kherdeb, custodian of the site for the past 15 years, who remembers such illustrious sightseers as Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat and the late King Hussein of Jordan. The rare visitors today are soldiers, Iranian pilgrims or Indian travelers.


Now this is cool Paleontologists Use Computer to "Morph" Deformed Fossils Back to Their Original Shapes

BUFFALO, N.Y. -- It's bad enough that fossils, buried deep in layers of rock for thousands or millions of years, may be damaged or missing pieces, but what really challenges paleontologists, according to University at Buffalo researchers, is the amount of deformation that most fossils exhibit.

That's why Tammy Dunlavey, a master's degree candidate in the Department of Geology in the UB College of Arts and Sciences, and her colleagues are working on a computational method to morph fossils back to their original shapes by calculating and excising the deformation."Our goal is to develop computer programs that can reliably solve the deformation problem," noted Dunlavey, who on April 1 presented research on a new suite of "retrodeformation" programs at a Geological Society of America meeting (North-Central section) in St. Louis.


Nottinghamshire man tries to improve TV reception with mobile antenna




Uncovering the secrets of one historic village


ARCHAEOLOGISTS have started a survey at King's Clip-stone in an attempt to unearth the secrets of the site's past.The historical site is one of three in Notting-hamshire where work began this week in a
major £100,000 archaeological survey — with Annesley motte and bailey and Worksop castle also the focus of hi-tech investigations.

The surveys will help to reveal the precise location of mediaeval walls and hearths, helping experts piece together answers to questions about the buildings' histories.They hope to uncover for the first time how and what they were constructed from, how long they were used for and the size and layout of the buildings. Says project manager Ursilla Spence: "The potential of this survey to help us get a much more complete picture of the history of Sherwood Forest and north Nottinghamshire is immense.


Archaeology work draws to a close

Excavation work by archaeologists at the Canons Marsh area of Bristol is about to finish.

Members of Cotswold Archaeology have been working on the site in the city centre for eight months. They have dug six trenches.The team has found remains of a medieval building, as well as streets and lanes linking the
building to the waterfront and Canons Marsh.


Towering Mysteries

Who built them and why? An amateur archaeologist tries to get to the bottom of some astonishing structures in Tibet and Sichuan Province, ChinaMartine "Frederique" Darragon set out from New York City for the hinterlands of western China and Tibet in 1998 to pursue an interest in the endangered snow leopard when she fell under the spell of another elusive phenomenon: old stone towers, some vaguely star-shaped and some more than 100 feet tall, scattered across the foothills of the Himalayas. Yet when she asked local residents about the towers—Who built them? When? Why?—nobody seemed to have a clue. What she had stumbled upon was rare indeed: a riddle in plain sight.


RICH, VIBRANT COMMUNITY LIFE OF RURAL MAYA DESCRIBED BY BU ARCHAEOLOGIST

Two thousand years ago, a trek through present-day Central America would have rewarded the traveler with a look at the Maya civilization in full flower — from the bustle of activity and architectural wonders of urban centers to the quieter pace and more utilitarian structures of rural communities. For today’s traveler, the voices of Maya’s well-studied urban centers remain vibrant. The voices of rural Maya, however, remain silent,
largely unfound.

A team of archaeologists from Boston University have spent the past four years gathering and analyzing items left behind by Maya living in rural Xibun, a community in the Sibun River Valley of central Belize. With the researchers’ coaxing, the Xibun artifacts are providing a story of life among rural Maya during the civilization’s Late Classic Period (600 – 900 A.D.).


Archaeoastronomy news Ancient builders followed stars

Many Bronze Age monuments in Europe and Africa were erected with the Sun and other stars in mind, says Dr Michael Hoskin, a UK historian of astronomy.

In one survey of 2,000 tombs he has shown how many were built to face the rising Sun - a symbol of the afterlife. A second study of stone structures in Menorca reveals they were set up to view the constellation of Centaurus.

The Cambridge University researcher has discussed his work at the 2004 National Astronomy Meeting in Milton Keyes.


Kind of a trivial story actually. More detail here. Archaeoastronomy has its share of fruitcakes, but there's an awful lot of interesting stuff going on in this field. Expect more good work in the future.

Computer technology to provide virtual tour of a mummy

Computer technology has found the gentle way to raise the dead - by introducing the virtual mummy. Nesperennub was a temple priest who died at about 35 nearly 3,000 years ago in Egypt. In preparation for eternal life, priests extracted his brain and his eyes, eviscerated his organs and embalmed his body with herbs, cedar oil and naphthalene. Then they wrapped him in bandages soaked with beeswax to keep out moisture and corruption, and buried him at Thebes on the west bank of the Nile, with a resin bowl accidentally stuck to his head.


I couldn't resist cutting off the quote at the resin bowl part. That's just too funny. But the story is a good one. This is another application of remote sensing, albeit on a smaller scale. What a glorious day it will be when things (mummies, deposits) don't have to get torn apart to see how they're put together. A hundred years from now, I firmly believe archaeologists will be shaking their heads at all the destruction we engaged in.

Update: More info at the SGI press release website. They're a bit more generous in their assessment of the resin bowl:

Most intriguingly, researchers have identified for the first time a mysterious, caplike object on Nesperennub's head as a ceramic bowl. This has never before been seen and raises new questions about ancient Egyptian burial rituals.


Yeah, they were often slipshod.