Archäologische Entdeckungen in 2019 (1) infographic
Grafik zeigt einige der besten archäologischen Entdeckungen des Jahres 2019.
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YEAR END

Archaeological discoveries of 2019

By Jordi Bou

December 31, 2019 - Zu den Funden in 2019 gehören Erkenntnisse bezüglich der Rolle von Frauen im Mittelalter, die ebenso wie Mönche heilige Bücher mit Schriften und Malereien anfertigten. Weiters die Domestikation wilder Äpfel, und der genetische Hintergrund der modernen Tibeter. In Indonesien wurden prähistoische Wandmalerein entdeckt, und in Ägypten ein gut erhaltenes Grab aus der Fünften Dynastie. Ein Silberschatz der Normannen wurde in England ausgegraben und das Wrack eines deutschen Kriegsschiffs aus dem 1. Weltkrieg vor den Falkland Inseln entdeckt.

1. GERMANY: Tiny flecks of rare ultramarine pigment derived from lapis lazuli and found on the teeth of a medieval German nun suggests women were more involved in illuminating sacred texts than previously thought. The woman, who lived between 997 and 1162, must often have licked the end of her paintbrush as she worked.

2. KAZAKHSTAN: Studies of apple seeds show that the domestic varieties eaten today likely originated in wild fruit in the Tien Shan mountains, with the seeds spread across western Asia and Europe firstly by large animal populations and then by humans travelling along the Silk Road and other trade routes.

3. INDONESIA: Cave art depicting human-animal hybrids hunting is the oldest known story told via images. The artwork is at least 44,000 years old, around twice the age of most similar cave-art scenes in Europe.

4. EGYPT: A remarkably well preserved tomb discovered at the Saqqara necropolis south of Cairo is believed to be that of a nobleman named Khuwy, who lived 4,300 years ago. The elaborate interior suggests that Khuwy played a prominent role in the court of the Fifth Dynasty pharoah Djedkare Isesi.

5. ENGLAND: Metal detectorists unearth a huge hoard of over 2,500 silver coins in the Chew Valley in Somerset. The coins, dating to soon after the Battle of Hastings in 1066, depict the defeated King Harold II and the triumphant William the Conqueror, and shine fresh light on the aftermath of the Norman invasion.

6. TIBET: A jawbone found in a cave 3,280m up on the Tibetan Plateau is identified as that of a 160,000-year-old Denisovan, an ancient human species that disappeared 50,000 years ago. The find suggests Denisovans may have evolved a gene variant that enabled them to live at high altitude, and that modern Tibetans may have inherited those genes.

7. SOUTH ATLANTIC: The wreck of one of the most famous German warships of World War I is found on the seafloor near the Falkland Islands, where it sank in a battle with British warships more than 100 years ago. SMS Scharnhorst sank on Dec 8, 1914, with more than 800 crew members onboard.

Sources
PUBLISHED: 13/12/2019; STORY: Graphic News; PICTURES: Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History / Monica Tromp / Christina Warinner; Olesia Misty; Dongju Zhang; Lanzhou University; U.S. Naval Historical Center Photograph; R. Sardi; AP; Getty Images
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