• sean-williams

    Where’s Atlantis? Find Out Now with our Interactive Google Flyover

    Atlantis has got to be one of the world’s most longstanding myths. Devised by Plato over 2,500 years ago, its popularity has rarely waned, and has been the birthplace for some of humanity’s most truly bizarre theories. From Gibraltar to the Aegean, it seems everyone’s had their say on the whereabouts of the mysterious island, that was supposedly created by Poseidon. Not all of Atlantis’ proponents, it must be said, are total crackpots. There’s logic, bathymetric studies and topographical data to back their claims – however spurious they may frequently seem. Others most definitely do fit the conspiracy theorist bill,…

  • sean-williams

    Headless ‘Vikings’ found in Burial Pit

    Archaeologists in the sleepy seaside town of Weymouth made a gruesome discovery this month – as the bodies of 51 headless men were found dumped in a thousand-year-old burial pit. The twisted bodies were found without any traces of clothing or valuable items, as good as confirming they had been killed in a mass execution. Radio-carbon dating has placed the grisly find between 890 and 1034 AD, around the time Vikings and Anglo-Saxons were waging a bloody conflict for control of Britain. The feared Norsemen had invaded and taken over the north and east of the island, whereas the Germanic…

  • owenjarus

    Today in pseudoscience

    A few years ago, a well-meaning person, who knew that I had an interest in archaeology, gave me a copy of a magazine called Ancient America. The magazine carries articles that, needless to say, I havent seen in any scholarly journals.Heres a sample from their last issue. Roman coins found along the Ohio RiverMinoan pendent found in OhioChinese treasure in California My first thought wow ancient Mediterranean civs really had a thing going for Ohio! Im not going to get into these claims except to say that I wouldnt put money on any of them standing up to scientific scrutiny.…

  • sean-williams

    CBBC Kids to Get Lock-in at the British Museum

    CBBC, the BBC’s children’s broadcaster, has announced a brand new kids’ quiz show, in which six contestants will pit their wits again guards and ‘ghosts’, as they spend a night in the British Museum unlocking the secrets of its most famous treasures. Relic will see the children dodging security and completing a number of interactive tasks, as they bid to become ‘guardians’ of the museum. However anyone failing the show will find themselves facing “incarceration in the museum forever”. A BBC release explains, “As the brave adventurers search the museum they must complete complex challenges and confront visions from the…

  • bija-knowles

    Italy Update: Roman Shipwrecks and Berlusconi Found in Deep Water

    The Ongoing Silvio Saga That Berlusconi is involved in a tangled web of political scandal and lurid details about his private life is nothing new. To date he’s been accused of bribery, an impropriety with an under-age girl, as well as involvement with the mafia, all with impunity (which makes me laugh, because in the UK all you need to make an MP resign is the whiff of a dodgy expense claims form). After all, Silvio is not stupid by any means, and at times when a problem has arisen, he has been known to conveniently have a law passed…

  • world

    Exclusive Interview: Dr. Robert Cargill on Virtual Reality Qumran

    Virtual Qumran designer Dr. Robert Cargill is at the forefront of a rapidly evolving discipline. He uses virtual reality as a tool to conduct archaeological research on Qumran, the site where the Dead Sea Scrolls were found in caves. An archaeologist by training, Cargill has taken it upon himself to learn how to create a virtual reality model of a site, a skill most archaeologists haven’t picked up – yet. He generously took some time off from his busy schedule to talk to me about Virtual Qumran and how virtual reality is changing archaeology. Model Behaviour Archaeologists, Dr. Cargill points out, have…

  • Ann

    Ancient Advertisement – Nefertiti Cigarettes

    Although traces of nicotine and even of cocaine have been found on Egyptian mummies that date as long as 3000 years back -French scientists examining the stomach of the Egyptian Pharaoh Rameses II‘s mummy found fragments of tobacco leaves most likely used in the embalming process – and discussion is still ongoing on how these plants exactly got to Egypt without the help of the Spanish conquistadores – a 1997 Discovery Channel show suggests ancient international trade: a Pacific crossing and then delivery via the Silk Route. Regardless if the Pharaohs were junkies or not, we doubt if Queen Nefertiti…

  • bija-knowles

    Five Quick Questions for Classicist Mary Beard

    Mary Beard is professor of Classics at Newnham College, Cambridge, and Classics editor of the Times Literary Supplement. Her academic work mainly focuses on aspects of Roman and Greek culture and she claims to be ‘particularly interested in the reception of Classics in the modern world’. This is borne out by her column for the Times Online, A Don’s Life, which comments incisively on modern life, often with a classical twist – I particularly liked her suggestions for Latin catch-phrases for London’s tube commuters. She also has a long list of published books to her name, the two most recent…

  • sean-williams

    Book of the Dead Colloquium 2009: Sean’s Top Ten Facts & Theories

    I think my mind’s had just enough time to recover from this year’s two day-long Egyptological Colloquium. No less than 18 top experts lent their latest opinions and discoveries to the audience at the British Museum; more than enough for me to cope with. Though I’d like to think of myself as an avid fan of the ancient world, I could never for a second hope to pass myself off as a resident Book of the Dead buff – so there was plenty of new material for my mediocre mind to cope with. So, a good sleep and some brainless…

  • bija-knowles

    New Finding: Tuscans are not Etruscans

    New research suggests that there is no genetic link between the inhabitants of modern-day central Italy and the civilised race who lived there well before the rise of the Roman empire. Despite the fact that the Etruscans were never physically wiped out by the Romans, experts have concluded that for some reason they are not the ancestors of the modern-day Tuscans. Etruria spanned from south of Rome up to the Po River valley during the civilisation’s most powerful period, and the Etruscans inhabited the area of Rome before the city claimed its independence from the Etruscan kings in 509 BC.…