ARCHAEOLOGY

AROUND THE WORLD

CANADA: Archaeologists have revisited the wreck of HMS Erebus, one of the ships of the ill-fated 1845 Franklin Expedition’s quest to find the Northwest Passage. They retrieved more than 275 artifacts from the captain’s steward’s pantry and 2 officers’ cabins, including a pair of lieutenant’s epaulettes in a bedside drawer. In the pantry, divers found fancy table settings as well as a leather-bound folio. Captain John Franklin and the expedition’s 128 crew members perished off King William Island during their search.

They may not

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from ARCHAEOLOGY

ARCHAEOLOGY3 min read
From The Field
A vital part of the AIA’s mission is to educate and inform the public about archaeology and the importance of cultural heritage. To that end, each year at the AIA’s Annual Meeting, the Excellence in Undergraduate Teaching Award is presented to someon
ARCHAEOLOGY1 min read
Workhouse Woes
The hard labor and often cruel conditions experienced by the indigent inmates of London’s workhouses are well-documented in nineteenth-century historical records and popular literature. However, recent explorations of the remnants of the St. Pancras
ARCHAEOLOGY1 min readPolitical Ideologies
Pompeian Politics
Many of the buildings along Pompeii’s streets are covered with painted messages extolling the virtues of candidates running for office nearly 2,000 years ago. “These graffiti played a similar role to our electoral posters, to get consensus and suppor

Related