Tag Archives: archaeology

Mayan sculpture discovered in Guatemalan pyramid

Mayan sculpture discovered in Guatemalan pyramid

Francisco Estrada-Belli working on the frieze in an undated photoThe figures are richly decorated with quetzal feathers and jade

Archaeologists working in a Mayan pyramid in Guatemala have discovered an “extraordinary” stucco sculpture depicting gods and Mayan leaders.

The frieze, which is eight metres long and two metres wide (26ft by six feet), shows three figures decorated with quetzal feathers and jade sitting atop the head of a mountain spirit.

It was found at the pre-Columbian archaeological site of Holmul.

Site director Francisco Estrada-Belli called it it a once-in-a lifetime find.

Snake Lords v Tikal

The frieze was found below a 20m-high (65ft) pyramid which was built over it in the 8th Century.

“The preservation is wonderful because it was very carefully packed with dirt before they started building over it,” Mr Estrada-Belli said.

The sculpture is believed to depict the crowning of a new Mayan leader in about AD590.

It also bears an inscription made up of 30 glyphs, which was deciphered by Harvard University expert Alex Tokovinine.

The inscription says that the carving was commissioned by the ruler of a nearby city-state, Ajwosaj ChanK’inich.

The archaeologists say the frieze and its inscription shed light on a classical period of Maya rule in which two rival kingdoms, Tikal and the Snake Lords, fought for control of the region.

Mr Tokovinine says the inscription suggests that Ajwosaj, who was a vassal of the Snake Lords, came to the site to re-establish the local political and religious order after Holmul, which had supported the Tikal kingdom, had switched sides.

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3,000-year-old text sheds light on biblical history

Message decoded: 3,000-year-old text sheds light on biblical history

By Sasha Bogursky

Published July 31, 2013

FoxNews.com

A few characters on the side of a 3,000-year-old earthenware jug dating back to the time of King David have stumped archaeologists until now — and a fresh translation may have profound ramifications for our understanding of the Bible.

Experts had suspected the fragmentary inscription was written in the language of the Canaanites, a biblical people who lived in the present-day Israel. Not so, says one expert who claims to have cracked the code: The mysterious language is actually the oldest form of written Hebrew, placing the ancient Israelites in Jerusalem earlier than previously believed.

“Hebrew speakers were controlling Jerusalem in the 10th century, which biblical chronology points to as the time of David and Solomon,” ancient Near Eastern history and biblical studies expert Douglas Petrovich told FoxNews.com.

“Whoever they were, they were writing in Hebrew like they owned the place,” he said.

“It is just the climate among scholars that they want to attribute as little as possible to the ancient Israelites.”

– Doug Petrovich 

First discovered near the Temple Mount in Jerusalem last year, the 10th century B.C. fragment has been labeled the Ophel Inscription. It likely bears the name of the jug’s owners and its contents.

If Petrovich’s analysis proves true, it would be evidence of the accuracy of Old Testament tales. If Hebrew as a written language existed in the 10th century, as he says, the ancient Israelites were recording their history in real time as opposed to writing it down several hundred years later. That would make the Old Testament an historical account of real-life events.

According to Petrovich, archaeologists are unwilling to call it Hebrew to avoid conflict.

“It’s just the climate among scholars that they want to attribute as little as possible to the ancient Israelites,” he said.

Needless to say, his claims are stirring up controversy among those who do not like to mix the hard facts of archaeology — dirt, stone and bone — with stories from the Bible.

Tel Aviv University archaeologist Israel Finkelstein told FoxNews.com that the Ophel Inscription is critical to the early history of Israel. But romantic notions of the Bible shouldn’t cloud scientific methods — a message he pushed in 2008 when a similar inscription was found at a site many now call one of King David’s palaces.

At the time, he warned the Associated Press against the “revival in the belief that what’s written in the Bible is accurate like a newspaper.”

Today, he told FoxNews.com that the Ophel Inscription speaks to “the expansion of Jerusalem from the Temple Mount, and shows us the growth of Jerusalem and the complexity of the city during that time.” But the Bible? Maybe, maybe not.

Professor Aren Maeir of Bar Ilan University agrees that some archaeologists are simply relying too heavily on the Bible itself as a source of evidence.

“[Can we] raise arguments about the kingdom of David and Solomon? That seems to me a grandiose upgrade,” he told Haaretz recently.

In the past decade, there has been a renaissance in Israel of archaeologists looking for historical evidence of biblical stories. FoxNews.com has reported on several excavations this year claiming to prove a variety of stories from the Bible.

Most recently, a team lead by archaeologist Yossi Garfinkel wrapped up a ten-year excavation of the possible palace of King David, overlooking the valley where the Hebrew king victoriously smote the giant Goliath.

Garfinkel has another explanation as to the meaning behind the Ophel Inscription.

“I think it’s like a [cellphone] text,” Garfinkel told FoxNews.com. “If someone takes a text from us 3,000 years from now, he will not be able to understand it.”

The writing on the fragmented jug is a type of shorthand farmers of the 10th century used, in his opinion, and not an official way of communication that was passed on.

“What’s more important is that there is a revolution in this type of inscription being found,” Garfinkel told FoxNews.com. There have been several from the same time period found across Israel in the past five years.

“When we find more and more of these inscriptions, maybe not until the next generation, we may have a breakthrough,” he said.

Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/science/2013/07/31/3000-year-old-inscription-translated-biblical-history/?intcmp=trending#ixzz2b2LMbAgK

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Pharaoh’s sphinx paws found in Israel

Pharaoh’s sphinx paws found in Israel

By by Megan Gannon

Published July 10, 2013

LiveScience
  • egyptian-sphinx

    This sphinx fragment was found by archaeologists with the Hebrew University of Jerusalem during excavations at Hazor. (Amnon Ben-Tor, Sharon Zuckerman / Hebrew University Institute of Archaeology)

Archaeologists digging in Israel say they have made an unexpected find: the feet of an Egyptian sphinx linked to a pyramid-building pharaoh.

The fragment of the statue’s front legs was found in Hazor, a UNESCO World Heritage Site just north of the Sea of Galilee. Between the paws is a hieroglyphic inscription with the name of king Menkaure, sometimes called Mycerinus, who ruled Egypt during the Old Kingdom more than 4,000 years ago and built one of the great Giza pyramids.

Researchers don’t believe Egypt had a relationship with Israel during Menkaure’s reign. They think it’s more likely that the sphinx was brought to Israel later on, during the second millennium B.C. [Images: Glitzy Discovery at Giza Pyramids]

The inscription also includes the phrase, “Beloved by the divine manifestation that gave him eternal life.” Amnon Ben-Tor, one of the Hebrew University archaeologists leading the excavations at Hazor, thinks that descriptor could be a clue the sphinx originated in the ancient seat of sun worship, Heliopolis, which is today mostly destroyed and covered up by Cairo’s sprawl.

The part-lion, part-human sphinx was a mythical creature represented in art throughout the ancient Near East as well as India and Greece. Ben-Tor and colleagues say the artifact found at Hazor is the first-ever discovered sphinx fragment associated with king Menkaure. It’s also the only royal Egyptian sphinx ever to be unearthed in Israel, according to a statement from Hebrew University.

The statue fragment was exposed at the entrance to the city palace in an archaeological layer that dates to the mysterious destruction of Hazor when it was occupied by the Canaanites in the 13th century B.C.

The researchers think the sphinx could have been brought to Israel during the 17th to 16th centuries B.C., when part of Egypt was controlled by the Hyksos, a people believed to be originally from northern Canaan. Alternatively, the royal sculpture may have arrived in Hazor as a gift from an Egyptian king during the 15th to 13th centuries B.C., when Egypt controlled much of Canaan through a system of vassal states. At that time, Hazor was the most important city in the southern Levant, covering some 200 acres, with an estimated population of about 20,000.

Hazor was strategically located at a crossroads between Egypt and Babylon. Initially a Canaanite city, it had been fortified since the early second millennium B.C., conquered by the Israelites, rebuilt under King Solomon and ultimately destroyed by the Assyrians in 732 B.C.

Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/science/2013/07/10/pharaoh-sphinx-paws-found-in-israel/?intcmp=trending#ixzz2amzYoC00

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Lost medieval mansion found at UK construction site

Lost medieval mansion found at UK construction site

By Sasha Bogursky

Published July 25, 2013

FoxNews.com
  • wessexarch1.jpg

    British archaeologists have uncovered the remains of stone foundations in a pattern which suggests that there may have been a series of medieval buildings on a modern construction site. The mystery lies in exactly what the buildings were once used for. (Wessex Archaeology)

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    These medieval decorated floor tiles suggest that these were substantial buildings of high status. (Wessex Archaeology)

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    Somerset locals visit the site on July 13th to learn more about the mysterious medieval structure at Longforth Farm on Archaeology Day; hosted by Bloor Homes. (Rob Perrett/Wessex Archaeology)

It sounds like a case for Sherlock Holmes: a 900-year-old medieval manor mysteriously vanishes, only to be uncovered later by British archaeologists.

The ancient site has been stripped of its materials except for the foundation — and there is no record of it ever existing.

Got chills? So do the archaeologists who discovered it.

“This is a significant find and therefore very exciting, particularly as there are no documentary records that such a site ever existed here,” said Wessex Archaeology’s senior buildings archaeologist Bob Davis, who participated in the excavation.

Excavators from the company arrived on April 8 at the site in Longforth Farm in Wellington, Somerset, a small agricultural county in southwest England. They planned to perform an archaeological dig prior to the construction of a housing development by Bloor Homes, as required by the Somerset Country Council.

PHOTOS: Ancient Maya Cave Exploration

They had no way of knowing their routine excavation would reveal a hidden series of buildings dating to the 12th through 14th century.

“Such things are as rare as hen’s teeth.”

– Bob Davis of Wessex Archaeology 

“This sort of thing turning up — a large medieval building of such high status without any surviving historical records — it’s exceptionally mysterious and strange,” senior historic environment officer for the Somerset Country Council Steve Membery told ThisIsCornwall.co.uk.

“It looks as if it’s a previously unrecorded, undocumented, high-status, ecclesiastical manor house,” Davis told the British paper. “Such things are as rare as hen’s teeth.”

All that remains from what appears to have been an impressive, affluent mansion is the stone foundation and a few leftover artifacts. It is expected that antiquities thieves would steal valuables from the site, but archaeologists are literally picking at scraps to find out what happened to the doors, windows, stones and other materials that are to be found in a large manor.

They were able to uncover stunningly glazed ceramic roof tiles and carefully decorated floor tiles, however, suggesting the buildings were of high status, perhaps used for religious services.

But much like the American colony of Roanoke, N.C., whomever used the buildings left no trace or record of their existence; they appear to have simply vanished.

“We do not yet know who owned or used the buildings,” community and education officer for Wessex Archaeology Laura Joyner told FoxNews.com. “They appear to form a distinct complex of buildings.”

The most recent discovery has helped shed some light on the use for some of the structures.

According to Wessex Archaeology, the two tiles pictured below confirm the existence of private chambers and a possible chapel at the Longforth Farm site.

Milford Sound in New Zealand

The tile on the left includes a checkered agent or shield motif, which possibly relates to the family name of St. Barbe, a medieval aristocratic British family. Centuries later, Ursula St. Barbe, the daughter of Henry St. Barbe from Somerset with the same last name, was a lady in the court of Queen Elizabeth I of England in the late 1500s.

RELATED: Ancient Graffiti Found in Rome’s Colosseum 

The second tile, similar to one found at Glastonbury Abbey, is a depiction of a helmeted King Richard I (1189-1199) on horseback, charging his enemy. The tile “would originally have had an opposing tile showing Saladin, Sultan of Egypt, also in a symbolic combat pose,” according to Wessex Archaeology. “These two great adversaries were involved in the Third Crusade (1189–1192) and are often depicted together on this type of floor tile.”

Based on the artifacts, the owners of the buildings were wealthy and powerful. So what happened to those medieval VIPs?

The approximately 1,400 locals who flocked to the site when it opened to the public want to know as well.

“Hopefully, this fills in a missing bit of the jigsaw of medieval Somerset,” Davis added.

“Excavation is ongoing, but will come to an end next week,” Joyner confirmed to FoxNews.com. Wessex archaeologists hope to have more answers soon.

Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/science/2013/07/25/medieval-mansion-mysteriously-appears/?intcmp=features#ixzz2aHlTvYxA

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Stone coffin to be opened at Richard III grave site

Stone coffin to be opened at Richard III grave site

By Megan Gannon

Published July 24, 2013

LiveScience
  • Hunt for King Richard 4.jpg

    A stained glass window at Cardiff Castle depicts King Richard III and Queen Anne Neville. (University of Leicester)

  • richard-stone-coffin-2

    An intact stone coffin found in the ruins of Grey Friars, the monastery where Richard III was buried. (University of Leicester)

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    Feb. 4 2013: Remains found underneath a parking lot last September at the Grey Friars excavation in Leicester, which have been declared “beyond reasonable doubt” to be the long lost remains of England’s King Richard III, missing for 500 years. (AP Photo/ University of Leicester)

Archaeologists are set to lift the lid on a stone coffin discovered at the site of the English friary where Richard III’s remains were found.

Excavators suspect the tomb billed as the only intact stone coffin found in Leicester may contain the skeleton of a medieval knight or one of the high-status friars thought to have been buried at the church.

Richard III, the last king of the House of York, ruled England from 1483 to 1485, when was killed in battle during the War of Roses, an English civil war. He received a hasty burial at the Grey Friars monastery in Leicester as his defeater, Henry Tudor, ascended to the throne. Grey Friars was destroyed in the 16th century during the Protestant Reformation, and its ruins became somewhat lost to history. [Photos: The Discovery of Richard III]

‘This is the first time we have found a fully intact stone coffin during all our excavations.’

– Mathew Morris, of the University of Leicester Archaeological Services

A dig beneath a parking lot in Leicester last summer revealed the remains of Grey Friars and a battle-ravaged skeleton later confirmed to be that of Richard III. Excavators also found a handful of other graves, including this coffin, which the researchers think was put in the ground more than 100 years before Richard’s burial.

This month, the team from the University of Leicester started a fresh excavation at the site. Now in their final week of digging, the researchers plan to open the coffin in the days ahead.

They think it might contain the remains of the knight Sir William de Moton of Peckleton, who died between 1356 and 1362, or one of two heads of the Grey Friars order in England, Peter Swynsfeld or William of Nottingham.

“Stone coffins are unusual in Leicester and this is the first time we have found a fully intact stone coffin during all our excavations of medieval sites in the city,” site director Mathew Morris, of the University of Leicester Archaeological Services (ULAS), said in a statement. “I am excited that it appears to be intact.”

Morris and his team intend to measure and take photos of the coffin before they lift the lid, which they say they will do out of view of the media.

Meanwhile, Richard’s remains are set to be reinterred next year. Last week, the Leicester Cathedral announced its $1.5 million ($1 million U.S.) plans to rebury the king in a new raised tomb at the church.

Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/science/2013/07/24/stone-coffin-to-be-opened-at-richard-iii-site/?intcmp=features#ixzz2a7Tv66R3

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6,000-year-old wooly mammoth parts found in Iowa backyard

6,000-year-old wooly mammoth parts found in Iowa backyard

 A 10-inch tooth, a vertebrae, and a whole collection of ribs all thought to belong to wooly mammoths were found on the property of an anonymous citizen from Mahaska County, IA. The remnants of two adult wooly mammoths and one juvenile have already been unearthed, with more discoveries still being made after almost a year’s worth of digging. The age of the artifacts are estimated at between 14,000 and 16,000 years old.

Laura Decook, a member on the Mahaska County Conservation Board, is thrilled to work on the dig. “It’s fascinating to see that ancient history in Iowa is right below our feet,” she says. “It tells us a lot about what earth was like right here 16,000 years ago.” Thanks to the bones, scientists now believe that around 16,000 years ago, the climate of the rural Iowa town was similar to that of southern Canada today, and that Mahaska County was populated by fir and spruce trees. It is believed that the mammoths may have lived nearby because of a ‘plunge pool,’ a deep pool of water that exists under a waterfall. In 2010, flooding brought the bones back up.

While the ancient findings are priceless, they belong completely to the anonymous landowner, who has allowed conservationists to work on his property. He says that ultimately the bones should be kept in Mahaska County to be used educationally.

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Atlantis Found in Brazil?

Possible Atlantis Found In Brazil Via Discovery Of Ancient Granite Rock

May 9, 2013
Image Credit: Photos.com

Lawrence LeBlond for redOrbit.com – Your Universe Online

First mentioned in two dialogues (Timaeus and Critias) by Plato in 360 BC, the legendary island of Atlantis has long been sought by historians, archaeologists, and explorers alike. Said to have originally existed between South America and Africa, this sunken island has been searched for in no less than dozens of locations worldwide, from Bimini to the Black Sea.

In a new twist, a team of scientists from Brazil and Japan say they have discovered their version of Atlantis, or at least an ancient piece of granite that was part of a continent that disappeared nearly a hundred million years ago when Africa and South America separated.

Brazilian “Atlantis,” as they are calling it, may actually have been part of the ancient supercontinent Pangaea. Pangaea formed about 300 million years ago during the late Paleozoic and early Mesozoic eras. It existed for more than 100 million years before beginning to break apart to form the continents as we see them today.

The researchers discovered the granite artifact more than 8,000 feet deep in a region known as the Rio Grande Elevation, about 900 miles of the coast of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. The team said the granite is a natural formation that normally forms on dry land, which would offer evidence that the region was once above sea level.

The discovery was announced by the Geology Service of Brazil (CPRM) as a sign of a lost continent.

“This could be Brazil´s Atlantis,” said CPRM geology director Roberto Ventura Santos. “We are almost certain, but we need to strengthen this hypothesis.”

“It is unusual because it is granite rock,” he added. “And you don’t find granite on the seabed.”

The initial granite formation was discovered last year during seabed dredging by geologists. Just last month Japan offered undersea observations with its manned mini-sub Shinkai 6500 and reportedly found more granite formations.

Hiroshi Kitazato, the Japanese researcher who led the work for the Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology (JAMSTEC), said in an interview with The Telegraph that the region was of interest to researchers.

“This is the region that has been least explored worldwide,” he told the paper´s Donna Bowater. “So, we believe it is very important to research it. Previously, the Shinkai carried out “‹“‹expeditions closer to Japan, the Indian and the Pacific Ocean.”

The current theory on the granite formations is that the area was once a large island or more likely part of the continental crust, in part because the materials uncovered are much different than the surrounding seabed. However, the researchers said further testing and analysis will be needed to make a solid confirmation. The scientists plan to drill for more samples later this year after they can gather geological and biological data from the samples they collected so far.

Although Santos has called the finding a piece of the “Brazilian Atlantis,” he explained that the remark is “more in terms of symbolism“¦ Obviously, we don´t expect to find a lost city in the middle of the Atlantic.”

“But if it is the case that we find a continent in the middle of the ocean, it will be a very big discovery that could have various implications in relation to the extension of the continental shelf,” he told The Telegraph.

The research has been carried out by the Brazilian Geological Service, the Oceanographic Institute of the University of Sao Paulo and the Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology, which operated the Shinkai 6500 research sub.

Source: Lawrence LeBlond for redOrbit.com – Your Universe Online

 

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Vampire bones found

‘Vampire’ bones found at Polish construction site

Nature’s Mysteries

Published July 12, 2013

FoxNews.com
  • Count Dracula
    Universal Pictures

Planning to visit Poland soon? Beware of the vampires.

Well, not really.

According to the Telegraph, skeletons were found with their heads removed and placed on their legs in the Polish town of Gliwice.

This gruesome burial is evidence that the victims had been accused of being a vampire and thus subjected to an execution ritual — murdered and mutilated, to make sure that the undead stayed dead.

It’s not clear when the bodies were buried. One archeologist at the site said they had no belt buckles, buttons or other adornments that could help determine their era. Historians say the practice of killing accused vampires was common in Slavic lands after the adoption of Christianity, the Telegraph reported.

Sometimes, those accused of being vampires were simply decapitated, while others would be hung from a gibbet (a gallows of sorts) until the head separated from the body. Then, the heads were placed on the legs to deter the so-called “creatures of the night” from rising from their graves.

Found during the construction of a road near Gliwice in southern Poland, the bodies left archaeologists surprised: They were used to finding remains of WWII soldiers — not “vampire” skeletons.

Unlike the pale, blood-thirsty creatures depicted in numerous television shows, books and movies, the definition of a vampire in the Middle Ages was much broader. In those times, a vampire could be anyone who still held pagan beliefs, according to the Telegraph.

Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/science/2013/07/12/polish-archeologists-find-vampires-at-construction-site/?intcmp=trending#ixzz2ZBBwiy14

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Earliest alphabetical inscription from Biblical times found in Jerusalem

Earliest alphabetical inscription from Biblical times found in Jerusalem

Published July 10, 2013

FoxNews.com
  • eilatmazar1.jpg

    Archaeologist Eilat Mazar shows off her 3,000-year-old Biblical find. (Key to David’s City/Youtube)

  • inscription.jpg

    Reading from left to right, the text is composed of a combination of letters that translate to m, q, p, h, n, (possibly) l, and n and have no known meaning in west-Semitic languages. (Key to David’s City/Youtube)

A 3,000-year-old inscribed piece of an earthenware jug dating back to the time of King David has archaeologists stumped.

The ancient inscription is the earliest alphabetical written text ever found in Jerusalem, according to researchers from Hebrew University who discovered the artifact.

Working near the Temple Mount, head archaeologist Eilat Mazar uncovered the 10th century B.C.E inscription, engraved on a large pithos, a necklace ceramic jar, along with six others at the Ophel excavation site.

The inscription is written in the Canaanite language, a Biblical people who lived in the present-day Israel, and is the only of its kind to be found in Israel. The artifact predates the previously oldest inscription found in the area by 250 years and predates the Biblical Israelites’ rule.

Reading from left to right, the text is composed of a combination of letters that translate to m, q, p, h, n, (possibly) l, and n and have no known meaning in west-Semitic languages.

The meaning of the text remains a mystery but Mazar suspects it relates to the jar’s contents or the name of its owner.

Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/science/2013/07/10/earliest-alphabetical-inscription-from-biblical-times-found-in-jerusalem/?intcmp=features#ixzz2Yxr6jrgz

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Digging up Goliath’s Home town

Archaeologists enlist volunteer help to uncover Biblical city

By Sasha Bogursky

Digging History

Published July 11, 2013

FoxNews.com 

 They still haven’t found the slingshot — maybe you will?

Archaeologists in Israel are busy excavating huge, fortified structures in the Biblical city of Libnah, which overlooks the Philistine capital of Gath, home to the tale of David famously slaying the giant Goliath with a well-slung stone.

And they could use a little help.

“One of our goals is to open the excavation to the public,” Itzhaq Shai, program director of the Tel Burna Excavation Project, told FoxNews.com. “Unlike most excavations, we are looking for people come to participate for even just a few hours. Hopefully they will be captivated and come back.”

Archaeology is no longer just for archaeologists, it seems; the initiative by Bar Ilan University is leading experts and volunteers on the excavation of the Biblical Judean city, known today as Tel Burna.

The site of Tel Burna is about an hour drive from Jerusalem and is thought to have served during the Iron Age as a border city between the kingdoms of Judah and the Philistines — a people remembered chiefly as the bad guys of the Hebrew Bible. The site has been well known since the middle of the 19th century, but excavations only began in 2009.

“No one excavated Tel Burna before because they didn’t think there would be too much to find,” Shai said.

It appears they were wrong. Since beginning the dig, Shai and his team have uncovered huge fortifications, building structures, idols, decanters, human and animal remains, and pottery with the seal of Judah from the 7th and 8th centuries B.C.E.

“We found jar handles with the stamped seal that is unique to the administration of Judah in the 7th century,” Shai explained. “Because of this, we are able to identify the [human] remains we found as belonging to the administration of the kingdoms of Judah.”

“We believe Tel Burna to be the Biblical Libnah for a number of reasons,” Shai explains. “Based on the location of the site, the dates of the artifacts we found and the very nice architectural elements that date to the 7th century; adding this all together we believe it to be Libnah.”

Recently, a group of high school graduates from Canada participated in a dig at the Tel Burna site

“I’ve always wanted to go on an archaeological dig,” Jordanna Miller told the Canadian Jewish News. “During the dig I was helping to break down a barrier between areas to uncover a wall. We found lots of pottery shards and some bones. We found the jaw of a goat in three pieces and a rather large storage jar. It was hard work and a lot of manual labor but amazing and I would love to do it again.”

“Our jobs included digging for ancient artifacts, sifting through the dirt and dusting off rocks,” student Ami Moyal told FoxNews.com.

Shai is glad to share the spotlight on the findings; he says people from all over the world volunteer to excavate.

“One of the reasons I chose my job is I get to make the past come alive.”

Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/science/2013/07/11/archaeologists-uncover-biblical-city/?intcmp=features#ixzz2YoUR0RUr

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