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Tale Of The Teeth: Archaeologists Find Unusual Bone Collection In Chinese Cave
March 13, 2001 A team of researchers, including Lynne Schepartz, assistant professor of anthropology at the University of Cincinnati, has discovered an unusual collection of animal and human teeth dating back over ... > full story -
Archaeologists Head To Albania For Cultural Rescue Mission
March 7, 2001 The chaos that was once Albania could become tomorrow's hotspot for development. Before that commercialization begins, University of Cincinnati archaeologists want to identify ancient sites that ... > full story -
Anthropologist Examines The Power Of Water On Earth's Earliest Civilizations
February 21, 2001 Water supplies and water management were driving forces behind the development of the earliest known civilizations; however University of Cincinnati anthropologist Vernon Scarborough reports that ... > full story -
Texas A&M Field School Discoveries May Rewrite History Of Early North American Man
February 2, 2001 New discoveries in a valley on the eastern edge of the Texas Hill Country will prompt rewriting the history of early North American man, predict Texas A&M University archaeologists who are ... > full story -
Archaeologist Finds Arizona's Ancient Hohokam Was Complex, Advanced Culture That May Have Reached The West Coast
February 2, 2001 The Hohokam, who inhabited the dry Sonoran desert of southern Arizona, were more or less ignored, even though they had by far the most advanced canal irrigation system in the New World. Now, the ... > full story -
Classics Doctoral Student Finds Bones That Prove Homer Was Right About Sacrifices
January 23, 2001 Ancient animal bones stored in the basement of a Greek archaeological museum for the past 50 years have resolved a longstanding archaeological controversy and given historical credence to details in ... > full story -
New Fossil Study Rejects "Eve Theory" And Supports Diverse Ancestry Of Modern Humans
January 11, 2001 The ancestors of modern humans came from many different regions of the world, not just a single area, according to a University of Michigan study published in the current (Jan. 12) issue of Science. ... > full story -
Scientists, Archaeologists And Historians Will Unravel The Mystery Of Egypt's Sunken Cities
December 14, 2000 The recent discovery of two long-lost cities off the coast of Egypt has been hailed as one of the most exciting finds in the history of marine archaeology. But the location of the sunken cities of ... > full story -
After 5,000 Year Voyage, World's Oldest Built Boats Deliver -- Archeologists' First Look Confirms Existence Of Earliest Royal Boats At Abydos
November 1, 2000 A fleet of the oldest built wooden boats in the world, located in the desert sands of Abydos, Egypt-more than eight miles from the river Nile-are painstakingly being excavated by archeologists. The ... > full story -
New Evidence Indicates Four Corners Puebloans Migrated Far South After 1300
October 12, 2000 New evidence indicates while many Pueblo groups that abandoned the Four Corners area about 1300 migrated south to settle in northern Arizona and northern New Mexico, others made a swift, southernly ... > full story -
Archaeologists Discover Ancient Untouched Tomb In Syria
October 2, 2000 An ancient, untouched tomb of what may be royalty from one of the world's first city-dwelling civilizations has been discovered in Syria, containing human and animal remains, gold and silver ... > full story -
Ancient Mediterranean Port City May Have Been Holy Land Way Station
July 27, 2000 A partially submerged city on the Mediterranean Sea in present-day Turkey has yielded a second underwater church, leading researchers to believe the settlement was a magnet for pilgrims traveling to ... > full story
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