National Geographic's Top 10 Archaeological Stories of 2007
- From: Jack Linthicum <jacklinthicum@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Thu, 27 Dec 2007 12:14:38 -0800 (PST)
Seems a little heavy on dead bodies and "unproven mysteries".
NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC
Top 10 Archaeology Stories Of 2007
A broken tooth became the key to identifying the mummy of Hatshepsut,
the woman who ruled ancient Egypt as both queen and king.
`National Geographic` magazine has selected 10 greatest archaeology
discoveries this year:
10. Ancient `salt cured` man found in an Iranian mine
The mummy of a salt mine worker, naturally preserved in the mineral
for 1,800 years, surfaced in Iran as heavy rain exposed the remains.
9. Unusual tomb of Egyptian courtier was found
Archaeologists had a pleasant surprise when they stumbled upon the
intact tomb, full of realistic statuettes, of a powerful official of
the Egyptian court, 4,000 years old.
8. Frozen Inca Mummy Discovered
The mummified remains of a teenage girl who died more than 500 years
ago were found in Argentina.
7. Skeletons in love will never be parted
Archaeologists excavated two Stone Age skeletons, locked in an eternal
embrace not far from Verona, Italy.
6. Japanese underwater pyramid still a mystery
Submerged stone structures lying just off Yonaguni Jima are actually
the ruins of a Japanese Atlantis - an ancient city sunk by an
earthquake about 2,000 years ago.
5. Sacred Cave of Rome discovered
Archaeologists announced that they unearthed Lupercale - the sacred
cave where, according to legend, a she-wolf nursed the twin founders
of Rome.
4. Jesus` tomb found in Israel
A tomb that once held the remains of Jesus of Nazareth and those of
his wife and son has been Hatshepsut found in a suburb of Jerusalem,
claim the makers of a controversial film.
3. Egypt's female Pharaoh Identified by chipped tooth
A broken tooth became the key to identifying the mummy of Hatshepsut,
the woman who ruled ancient Egypt as both queen and king nearly 3,500
years ago.
2. Stonehenge settlement found - builders' homes and cult houses
Builders of the famous monument Stonehenge, which was also an
important ceremonial site, most likely lived in a major prehistoric
village nearby.
1. Mass plague graves found on Venice `Quarantine` island
Ancient mass graves containing more than 1,500 victims of the bubonic
plague have been discovered on a small island in Italy's Venetian
Lagoon.
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