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Archaeological and finds
The Heraklion Archaeological Museum displays most of the archaeological finds of the Minoan era.
Archaeological finds, however, discovered some original texts among the Dead Sea scrolls.
Archaeological finds in 1897 and diggings in the 1920s placed Truso at Gut Hansdorf.
Archaeological finds indicate the possible beginnings of the Bronze Age, which would ultimately spread throughout the ancient world from Afghanistan.
Archaeological finds show that the Lombards were an agricultural people.
Archaeological finds, such as cave paintings, prove that humans were present in the region in prehistoric times.
** Archaeological finds suggest that worship of Demeter and Persephone was widespread in Sicily and Greek Italy.
Archaeological finds show that Sierra Leone has been inhabited continuously for at least 2, 500 years, populated by successive movements from other parts of Africa.
Archaeological analysis of wild emmer indicates that it was first cultivated in the southern Levant with finds at Iraq ed-Dubb in northern Jordan dating back as far as 9600 BC.
Archaeological finds have shown that there were Stone Age people in the area ; and that by the Bronze Age the maritime influence was already strong.
Archaeological finds of pigeon pea include those from two Neolithic sites in Orissa, Gopalpur and Golbai Sassan dating between 3, 400 and 3, 000 years ago, and sites in South India, Sanganakallu and Tuljapur Garhi, also dating back to 3, 400 years ago.
Archaeological finds support the written sources.
Archaeological finds in the area have mostly been from tombs, bearing witness to the fact that in the following periods of history-Hellenistic and Roman times-Pylos remained a flourishing burgh.
Archaeological finds on the island are not very rich but they dot an area of 20 hectares, making it the second largest Baltic marketplace of the Viking Age after Hedeby.
Archaeological finds has shown that humans have been making use of shellfish as a food item for hundreds of thousands of years.
Archaeological finds in the county of Møre og Romsdal have been dated to 9, 200 BC and are probably the remains of settlers from Doggerland, an area now submerged in the North Sea, but at the time a landbridge that connected the present day British Isles with Jutland.
* Archaeological survey: used to accurately assess the relationship of archaeological sites in a landscape or to accurately record finds on an archaeological site.
Archaeological finds, some surface or semi-buried dwellings from the second half of the 15th century, suggest that Hungarians started to settle in the region after 1345 – 1347 when the territory was under the control of the king of Hungary.
Archaeological finds at Çatalhöyük in Anatolia indicate worship of a ' Magna Mater ' figure, a forerunner of the Cybele goddess found in later Anatolia and other parts of the near East.
Archaeological finds show human activity at that level with the discovery of carbonised wood.
Archaeological finds in the area show habitation from the Neolithic Age ( 2500-1700 B. C.
Archaeological finds confirm that Germanic and Slavic tribes were settled agriculturalists that were merely " drawn into the politics of an empire already falling apart for quite other causes ".
Archaeological finds indicate that these were fully or semi-spherical.
Archaeological finds on the Lokeren territory prove that this area was populated in Neolithic times.
Archaeological finds can be traced back to the Greek empire of Bactria and Buddhist civilization.

Archaeological and indicate
Archaeological excavations on the islands indicate sustained pig keeping up to and beyond the 13th century, a situation unique compared to Iceland and Greenland.
Archaeological remains found in the coastal zone indicate that the area has been inhabited since the Bronze Age ( ca.
Archaeological excavations and surveys carried out in Van province indicate that the history of human settlement in this region goes back at least as far as 5000 BC.
Archaeological records indicate that horse racing occurred in ancient Babylon, Syria, and Egypt.
Archaeological evidence from the British Isles seems to indicate that human sacrifice may have been practised, over times long pre-dating any contact with Rome.
Archaeological studies indicate this area was inhabited by prehistoric people.
Archaeological records indicate that a smaller wooden and stone Norman church had existed on the location of the south aisle of the present building.
Archaeological digs have not revealed any traces of Roman buildings, which seems to indicate that Albi was a modest Roman settlement.
Archaeological findings to the east and west indicate that humans settled in the area more than 10, 000 years ago.
Archaeological finds indicate an early prehistoric settlement, including objects made of flint dating from the earliest Stone Age.
Archaeological and literary sources indicate Hnefatafl may have been played on a 13 × 13 or an 11 × 11 board.
Archaeological finds indicate human habitations including fairly large cities before the Shang, but so far no evidence has surfaced that would verify either the names of those who ruled over these cities, their form of government, or any other specifics.
Archaeological and historical studies indicate that the first people to settle in the Timmins area were nomadic tribes such as Ojibwa and Cree dating back to 7000 BC.
Archaeological excavations also indicate that, by the 6th century BC, similar experimentation had taken place among the Iranian peoples inhabiting the Khwarezm region and Aral Sea basin, such as the Massagetae, Dahae and Saka.
Archaeological excavations and written evidence indicate that at the time of Alfred the island was linked by a causeway to East Lyng, with either end protected by a semi-circular stockade and ditch.
Archaeological records and ancient Chinese sources Book of Song indicate that the various tribes and chiefdom of the Japanese Archipelago did not begin to coalesce into more centralized and hierarchical polities until 300 ( well into the Kofun period ), when large tombs begin to appear while there were no contacts between the Wa and China.
Archaeological surveys indicate the village was first founded in the early Roman period with settlement persisting through to the Byzantine period, existing again in the Middle Ages and the modern era.
Archaeological finds, including flint tools at Swallow Vale Farm, indicate the presence of early settlements in Swallow.
Archaeological sources indicate that the local Celto-Dacian population retained its specificity as late as the 3rd century AD.
Archaeological finds dated to the 2nd century AD, after the Roman conquest, indicate that during that period, vessels found in some of the Iazygian cemeteries reveal fairly strong Dacian influence, according to Mocsy.
Archaeological findings indicate that the empire was situated in present-day Moravia, Slovakia, Lower Austria and Slovenia.

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