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What do moa eggs, seeds chewed by rats and 600-year-old footprints have in common? Lost planes, dog turds and frozen sleeping bags? Archaeologists in Aotearoa New Zealand deal with artefacts like these every day to work out how the people before us lived.
In this book David Veart walks alongside the archaeologists as they dig up the past on top of volcanoes and beneath our city streets, in Maori pa and explorers’ huts. He shows us the things they find - obsidian adzes, enamel cups, the carved prow of a waka - and tells us the remarkable stories they have uncovered of Polynesian voyagers and Pakeha sealers, Maori gardeners and Chinese storekeepers.
Looking for ancient DNA, researching your own rubbish (WARNING: stinky work ahead), doing aerial archaeology with Google Earth (better than leaning out of a biplane) - this book will have readers of all ages thinking like archaeologists as it excavates the stories of the past.
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What do moa eggs, seeds chewed by rats and 600-year-old footprints have in common? Lost planes, dog turds and frozen sleeping bags? Archaeologists in Aotearoa New Zealand deal with artefacts like these every day to work out how the people before us lived.
In this book David Veart walks alongside the archaeologists as they dig up the past on top of volcanoes and beneath our city streets, in Maori pa and explorers’ huts. He shows us the things they find - obsidian adzes, enamel cups, the carved prow of a waka - and tells us the remarkable stories they have uncovered of Polynesian voyagers and Pakeha sealers, Maori gardeners and Chinese storekeepers.
Looking for ancient DNA, researching your own rubbish (WARNING: stinky work ahead), doing aerial archaeology with Google Earth (better than leaning out of a biplane) - this book will have readers of all ages thinking like archaeologists as it excavates the stories of the past.