Poging GOUD - Vrij
Birds of a Feather
Archaeology
|July/August 2025
Intriguing rock art in the Four Corners reveals how the Basketmaker people drew inspiration from ducks 1,500 years ago

YOU DON’T HAVE TO BE a birder to recognize a duck call. The courtship whistles, odd cackles, and persistent quacking of ducks are some of the natural world’s most familiar sounds. In 2024, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service estimated that the North American population of wild ducks stands at around 34 million. Mallards, the most common duck species, are reckoned to number 6.6 million. Federal wildlife specialists arrive at these figures through annual surveys of duck breeding grounds, conducted from May to June, that allow them to forecast the fall flight, or the number of ducks that will migrate that autumn. Some scholars have suggested that an average fall flight before Europeans arrived in North America could have seen as many as 400 million ducks heading south. The cackling and quacking heard on the banks of the continent’s waterways in those days must have been deafening. For the Ancestral Puebloan people living in the Four Corners region near the San Juan River some 1,500 years ago, those calls seem to have taken on special resonance.

Dit verhaal komt uit de July/August 2025-editie van Archaeology.
Abonneer u op Magzter GOLD voor toegang tot duizenden zorgvuldig samengestelde premiumverhalen en meer dan 9000 tijdschriften en kranten.
Bent u al abonnee? Aanmelden
MEER VERHALEN VAN Archaeology

Archaeology
LEGEND OF THE CRYSTAL BRAIN
When most people envision the victims of the eruption of Mount Vesuvius in A.D. 79 that destroyed the cities of Pompeii and Herculaneum, they think of the casts of their bodies made by pouring plaster into voids left by their decaying corpses. Yet not all the physical remains of those who perished in the cataclysm decayed. In one case, a remarkable transformation occurred—a man’s brain turned to glass.
3 mins
July/August 2025

Archaeology
Birds of a Feather
Intriguing rock art in the Four Corners reveals how the Basketmaker people drew inspiration from ducks 1,500 years ago
8 mins
July/August 2025

Archaeology
THE HOME OF THE WEATHER GOD
In northern Anatolia, archaeologists have discovered the source of Hittite royal power
13 mins
July/August 2025

Archaeology
SAINTS ALIVE
Since 2019, archaeologists have been excavating in Berlin's oldest square, known as the Molkenmarkt, or Whey Market.
1 min
July/August 2025

Archaeology
SOLDIERS OF ILL FORTUNE
The Schmalkaldic War, which began in 1546 and lasted less than a year, pitted the forces of the Holy Roman emperor Charles V (reigned 1519-1556) against the Schmalkaldic League, a Protestant alliance formed by German principalities and cities within the empire.
1 mins
July/August 2025

Archaeology
A NEW LOOK AT AN OLD CITY
Archaeologists are reconstructing the complicated 400-year history of Virginia's colonial capital
13 mins
July/August 2025

Archaeology
ITALY'S GARDEN OF MONSTERS
Why did a Renaissance duke fill his wooded park with gargantuan stone
10 mins
July/August 2025

Archaeology
In Search of Lost Pharaohs
Anubis Mountain conceals the tombs of an obscure Egyptian dynasty
3 mins
July/August 2025

Archaeology
Setting Sail for Valhalla
Vikings staged elaborate spectacles to usher their rulers into the afterlife
15 mins
July/August 2025

Archaeology
BOUND FOR HEAVEN
During excavations of a Byzantine monastery in 2017 just north of Jerusalem's Old City, a team led by Israel Antiquities Authority archaeologists Zubair 'Adawi and Kfir Arbiv discovered an unusual burial in a crypt beneath the altar of the complex's church.
1 mins
July/August 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size