Thursday, December 20, 2012

2012 Top Ten Discoveries by Archaeology Magazine

Top 10 Discoveries of 2012

Volume 66 Number 1, January/February 2013

Any discussion of archaeology in the year 2012 would be incomplete without mention of the much-talked-about end of the Maya Long Count calendar and the apocalyptic prophecies it has engendered. With that in mind, as 2013 approaches, the year’s biggest discovery may actually be that we’re all still here—at least that’s what the editors of Archaeology continue to bet on.

However, you won’t find that story on our Top 10 list. We steered clear of speculation and focused, instead, on singular finds—the stuff, if you will—the material that comes out of the earth and changes what we thought we knew about the past.

Here you’ll see discoveries that range from a work of Europe’s earliest wall art to the revelation that Neanderthals, our closest relatives, selectively picked and ate medicinal plants, and from the unexpected discovery of a 20-foot Egyptian ceremonial boat to the excavation of stunning masks that decorate a Maya temple and tell us of a civilization’s relation to the cosmos.

Then there are the discoveries that just made us wonder. What drove someone to wrap their valuables in a cloth and hide them almost 2,000 years ago? And why were people in Bronze Age Scotland gathering bones and burying them in bogs?

The finds span the last 50,000 years and cover territories from the cradle of civilization to what is today one of the world’s most populous cities. These are a few of the discoveries that speak to us of both our record of ingenuity and our humanity. The enduring question is always: Were the people behind the evidence anything like us?
—The Editors


Maya Sun God Masks
Neanderthal Medicine Chest
First Use of Poison
Aztec Ritual Burial (and intact female burial, the only one...)
Caesar's Gallic Outpost
 Europe's Oldest Engraving (a vulva)
The First Pots (earliest pots discovered to date, 20,000 to 19,000 years old)
Scottish Mummies
Stashed Treasure in Israel
Oldest Egyptian Funerary Boat (and at a non-royal tomb)






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