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Websites
This website contains links to other websites which are
not under the control of and are not maintained by Channel 4 Television.
Channel 4 Television is not responsible for the content of these sites
and does not necessarily endorse the material on them.
Romanovs Find Closure in DNA
http://users.rcn.com/web-czar/dna.htm
A detailed account of the DNA testing used to confirm the fate of
the Romanovs.
Taung Child
www.mnh.si.edu/anthro/humanorigins/ha/taung1.html
The first early human fossil found in Africa, the Taung child, Australopithecus
africanus, was a 2.5 million-year-old ancestor of modern humans.
Lucy: Australopithecus Afarensis
www.archaeologyinfo.com/australopithecusafarensis.htm
Lucy, a female human ancestor more than three million years old, was
analysed by forensic archaeologists, who deduced that she walked in an
upright manner.
Search of Java Man
www.eastjava.com/books/mystery/html
/search.html
Full history with photographs of Eugene Dubois' search for fossilised
remnants of humankind's early ancestors, leading to the discovery of
the skullcap of Homo erectus.
The Piltdown Hoax
www.mnh.si.edu/anthro/humanorigins/ha/pilt.html
One of the most famous scandals in science. Includes an excellent FAQ
on the concept of race in
palaeoanthroplogy.
Krapina Neanderthal Fossil Collection
www.krapina.com/neandertals/index_en.htm
Pictures and history of the 1899 finding of the world's largest Neanderthal
site. Radiography has been used to reveal the health of the hominids 130,000
years ago.
Hybrid Child
http://cogweb.ucla.edu/EP/Neanderthal.html
Some
palaeoanthropologists
claim that Neanderthals and modern humans
not only coexisted but also cohabited.
Avebury
www.stonehenge.co.uk/avebury.htm
A clear explanation of the origins and construction of the Avebury
stone circle.
Avebury 'barber surgeon'
www.britarch.ac.uk/ba/ba48/ba48news.html
The story of the rediscovery of the remains of the Avebury 'barber
surgeon', one of British archaeology's best-known and most 'dramatic'
skeletons, which was thought destroyed during World War II but was rediscovered
in a basement of the Natural History Museum.
Slave Island: New York's Hidden History
www.bbc.co.uk/history/society_economy/society
/protest_reform/slave_island_01.shtml
Detailed description of the discovery of the slave burial ground and
upsetting account of slavery and the slave trade in New York up to its
abolition there in the 1820s.
Bones reveal little-known tale of New York slaves
www.cnn.com/TECH/9802/12/t_t/burial.ground/
CNN report of the discovery.
Shroud of Turin
www.shroudforum.com/
Many fascinating lines of debate about whether the Turin Shroud is
genuine or fake.
The Shroud of Turin
www.shroud.com/
All kinds of links and information about the Turin Shroud.
Physicians for Human Rights
www.phrusa.org/about/index.html
Physicians for Human Rights (PHR) is an organisation of health professionals,
scientists, and concerned citizens which uses medical and forensic sciences
to investigate and prevent violations of international human rights.
Guatemalan Forensic Anthropology Foundation http://garnet.acns.fsu.edu/~sss4407/EAFG.htm
Outline of the foundation's work and history.
Peace Brigades International
www.peacebrigades.org/guatemala.html
PBI works non-violently to support peace across the world. Between
1983 and 1999, its team in Guatemala joined forensic archaeologists to
observe the exhumations of those murdered by the military regime.
The First Humans: Java Man
www.mikedust.com/history/javaman.html
Accessible explanation of the discovery of Java Man.
Were the Neanderthals Our Ancestors?
www.nhm.ac.uk/palaeontology/v&a/cbs/ancestors.html
Article by palaeontologist Chris Stringer presenting the arguments about
the Lagar Velho Hybrid Child on the Natural History Museum website.
Pastoral Putrefaction Down on the Body Farm
www.cnn.com/2000/HEALTH/10/31/body.farm/
A description of the research done at the University of Tennessee Forensic
Anthropology Facility. Plus a biography of its founder.
Post-Pleistocene Human Evolution
www.cast.uark.edu/local/icaes/conferences/
wburg/posters/cslarsen/larsen.html
An academic paper about the bioarchaeological analysis of the transition
from foraging to farming.
700-Year-Old Maronite Mummies
www.mari.org/JMS/january97/700_Year_Old_Maronite.htm
A detailed account of the discovery and history of the Maronite
mummies by Lebanese historian Guita Hourani.
Maronite Mummies
www.mummytombs.com/mummylocator/group/maronite.htm
A clear explanation of the history, geography and discovery of
the Lebanese mummies. Aimed at children but interesting for everyone.
Inka Mummies
www.mummytombs.com/mummylocator/group/inka.htm
Lots of very accessible information about the mummies of the Andes.
Aimed at children but interesting for everyone.
Left-handedness in Medieval Britain
www.soton.ac.uk/~tjms/handed.html
Research into the incidence of modern and historical left-handedness
through measuring the length of bones in the arm.
Books
The Mummy Congress: Science, obsession, and the everlasting dead
by Heather Pringle (Fourth Estate, 2001) £15.99
Discover the preserved dead from around the world: from northern European
bog bodies to the odd Caucasian-looking mummies from Asia.
Modern Mummies: The preservation of the human body in the 20th century
by Christine Quigley (McFarland, 1998) £31.50
Covering all kinds of mummification, this book includes political leaders
such as Lenin and Mao, accidental preservations by nature, frozen climbers
and religious figures preserved by their congregations.
Discovering the Inca Ice Maiden: My adventures on Ampato by Johan
Reinhard (National Geographic Society, 1998) £10.99
A good account of Reinhard's expedition to the Peruvian Andes where he
uncovered children mummified by the freezing temperatures of the mountains.
Bog Man and the Archaeology of People by Dan Boothwell (British
Museum, 1986) £7.95
Describes the discovery of a 2,000-year-old body in a Cheshire peat field,
discusses the scientific analysis of the body, and explains how mummies
reveal information about the past.
The Bog People: Iron-Age Man preserved by PV Glob (Faber, 1969)
£12.99
Classic and very readable account of bog bodies found in Denmark and northwestern
Europe, with a discussion how these people lived and died. Includes some
excellent photographs.
Lenin's Embalmers by Ilya Zbarsky (Harvill, 1999) £7.99
Provides a fascinating insight into the procedures and technicalities
of preservation and also offers an unusual glimpse of life among the Soviet
elite. The embalmers were considered a national asset and led a privileged
existence.
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