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      Once-in-a-generation lunar event to shed light on Stonehenge’s links to the moon

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Monday, 15 April - 04:00

    Archaeologists and astrologers to study Wiltshire site’s lesser understood connection to the moon

    The rising and setting of the sun at Stonehenge , especially during the summer and winter solstices, continues to evoke joy, fascination and religious devotion.

    Now a project has been launched to delve into the lesser understood links that may exist between the monument and the moon during a once-in-a-generation lunar event.

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      Solving an early medieval money mystery with lead isotope and trace analysis

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica · Thursday, 11 April - 16:19 · 1 minute

    A selection of the Fitzwilliam Museum coins which were studied, including coins of Charlemagne and Offa.

    Enlarge / A selection of the Fitzwilliam Museum coins that were studied, including coins of Charlemagne and Offa. (credit: The Fitzwilliam Museum, University of Cambridge)

    Sometime around 660 CE, silver coinage replaced gold as the dominant form of currency in northwest Europe. But what was the source of all that silver? According to a recent paper published in the journal Antiquity, silver for the earlier post-Roman coins during this period came from Byzantine silver plate, while silver for the later coins most likely came from mines located in Melle, Aquitaine.

    “This was such an exciting discovery," said co-author Rory Naismith , a medieval historian at the University of Cambridge. "I proposed Byzantine origins a decade ago but couldn’t prove it. Now we have the first archaeometric confirmation that Byzantine silver was the dominant source behind the great seventh-century surge in minting and trade around the North Sea.”

    There are a number of high-tech tools that can be used to learn more about historic currencies. For instance, Michael Wiescher, a nuclear physicist at the University of Notre Dame, has combined XRF scaling with PIXE mapping of Roman denarii to test the currency's quality and learn more about the production techniques. Working with his undergraduate students, he has also used electron spectroscopy to measure the silver content of each coin and learn about how the impurities were distributed.

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      Banquet room with preserved frescoes unearthed among Pompeii ruins

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Thursday, 11 April - 15:10

    ‘Black room’ with frescoes inspired by Trojan war described as one of most striking discoveries ever made at site in southern Italy

    A banquet room replete with well preserved frescoes depicting characters inspired by the Trojan war has been unearthed among the ruins of Pompeii in what has been described as one of the most striking discoveries ever made at the archaeological site in southern Italy.

    The 15-metre-long, six-metre-wide room was found in a former private residence in Via di Nola, which was ancient Pompeii’s longest road, during excavations in the Regio IX area of the site.

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      Christie’s withdraws Greek vases from auction over links to convicted dealer

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Tuesday, 9 April - 11:26

    Exclusive: four vases in New York auction traced to Gianfranco Becchina, convicted in 2011 of illegally dealing in antiquities

    Christie’s has withdrawn four ancient Greek vases from Tuesday’s auction after a leading archaeologist discovered that each of them was linked to a convicted antiquities dealer.

    Dr Christos Tsirogiannis, an affiliated archaeology lecturer at the University of Cambridge and a specialist in looted antiquities and trafficking networks, told the Guardian that damning evidence was within the auction house’s own correspondence with the dealer, which was seized by the police.

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      Silver coin boom in medieval England due to melted down Byzantine treasures, study reveals

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Monday, 8 April - 23:01

    Chemical analysis reveals origin of coinage that stimulated trade and helped fuel development of new towns from seventh century

    Several decades after the Sutton Hoo burial , starting in about AD660, there was a sudden rise in the number of silver coins in circulation in England, for reasons that have long puzzled archaeologists and historians.

    The new rush of silver coinage stimulated trade and helped fuel the development of the new towns springing up at the time – but where did it come from? Were the Anglo-Saxon kings recycling old Roman scrap metal? Or had they found lucrative sources from mines in Europe?

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      Expedition uses small underwater drone to discover 100-year-old shipwreck

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica · Tuesday, 2 April - 18:01 · 1 minute

    3D model of a 100-year-old shipwreck off the western coast of Australia. Credit: Daniel Adams, Curtin University HIVE.

    A small underwater drone called Hydrus has located the wreckage of a 100-year-old coal hulk in the deep waters off the coast of western Australia. Based on the data the drone captured, scientists were able to use photogrammetry to virtually "rebuild" the 210-foot ship into a 3D model (above). You can explore an interactive 3D rendering of the wreckage here .

    The use of robotic submersibles to locate and explore historic shipwrecks is well established. For instance, researchers relied on remotely operated vehicles (ROVs) to study the wreckage of the HMS Terror , Captain Sir John S. Franklin 's doomed Arctic expedition to cross the Northwest Passage in 1846. In 2007, a pair of brothers (printers based in Norfolk) discovered the wreck of the Gloucester , which ran aground on a sandbank off the coast of Norfolk in 1682 and sank within the hour. Among the passengers was James Stuart, Duke of York and future King James II of England, who escaped in a small boat just before the ship sank.

    In 2022 , the Falklands Maritime Heritage Trust and National Geographic announced the discovery of British explorer Sir Ernest Shackleton 's ship Endurance . In 1915, Shackleton and his crew were stranded for months on the Antarctic ice after the ship was crushed by pack ice and sank into the freezing depths of the Weddell Sea. The wreckage was found nearly 107 years later, 3,008 meters down, roughly four miles (6.4 km) south of the ship's last recorded position. The wreck was in pristine condition partly because of the lack of wood-eating microbes in those waters. In fact, the lettering "ENDURANCE" was clearly visible in shots of the stern.

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      Explorers unlock the mystery of ‘pirate king’ Henry Avery who vanished after huge heist at sea

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Saturday, 30 March - 15:00

    Letter reveals disappearance of 17th century British pirate was tied to William III’s spy ring, Daniel Defoe and an archbishop

    In 1695, Henry Avery led his 160-strong crew to pull off the most lucrative heist in pirate history on the high seas, amassing gold, silver, sapphires, emeralds and diamonds worth more than £85m in today’s money. He became the most wanted criminal of his day but vanished without trace and was the stuff of legend for 300 years.

    Now shipwreck explorers Dr Sean Kingsley and Rex Cowan claim to have solved what they call the longest cold case in pirate history: the “pirate king” had entered the service of the king of England, William III, as a spy.

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      ‘Truth behind the myths’: Amazon warrior women of Greek legend may really have existed

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Sunday, 24 March - 07:00

    Excavations of bronze age graves have found battle-scarred female archers, says the historian Bettany Hughes

    In Greek legends, the Amazons were feared and formidable women warriors who lived on the edge of the known world. Hercules had to obtain the magic girdle of the Amazonian queen Hippolyte in one of his 12 labours, and Achilles killed another queen, Penthesilea, only to fall in love with her as her beautiful face emerged from her helmet.

    These horseback-riding, bow-wielding nomads, who fought and hunted just like men, have long been shrouded in myth, but archaeologists are discovering increasing evidence that they really did exist.

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      Bronze age objects from ‘Pompeii of the Fens’ to go on display

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Wednesday, 20 March - 05:00

    Settlement on stilts dropped into River Nene after a fire nearly 3,000 years ago and was preserved in silt

    A bronze age settlement built on stilts that dropped “like a coffee plunger” into a river after a catastrophic fire has provided a window on our past lives, according to the archaeologist that led the investigation of the Cambridgeshire site.

    Must Farm, nicknamed the Pompeii of the Fens, offers “exceptional clarity” because of a combination of charring and waterlogging, said Mark Knight, of Cambridge University’s archaeological unit.

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