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News stories tagged with "archeology"

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Digging Up History From The Depths of Lake Champlain
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A Revolutionary war cannonball<br /><br />Source:  Ed Scollon
A Revolutionary war cannonball<br /><br />Source: Ed Scollon
Cannon lifted from the bottom
Cannon lifted from the bottom
(10/21/04) In October of 1776, Benedict Arnold led a small flotilla of gunboats up the shore of Lake Champlain. The British were sailng southward, hoping to use their freshwater navy to divide the American colonies in half. In the battle at Valcour Island, Arnold inflicted enough damage that the British invasion was delayed. Now, a group of amateur divers and archeologists is exploring the battle site. As Brian Mann reports, they're using modern forensic techniques to dig up new clues about the men who fought and died in the battle.
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Natural Selections: Carbon-14 Dating
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(10/11/01) Measuring the level of carbon-14, a natural radioactive isotope, in organic material has proven to be a reliable way of determining the age of archeological and paleontological remains. Dr. Curt Stager and Martha Foley discuss how it works.
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Blacksmith David Woodward sets in place the final piece of the weather vane he made for the Adirondack Carousel in Saranac Lake, which opens Saturday at 1 pm with a ribbon-cutting ceremony. Photo: Mark Kurtz.
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