A Researcher Chisels New Perspectives on Ancient Art
History
Arts & Culture
Zainab Bahrani of Columbia University photographs ancient statues and reliefs carved into the rocks of remote Iraq to create a database for conservators and scholars. The effort is “decentering Europe from histories of art and histories of archaeology.”Talking Tut: A Conversation With Author Christina Riggs
History
In Treasured, Riggs, a professor of the history at Durham University in England, details and analyzes complex cultural and political forces behind the scenes, both in Egypt and around the world, that have shaped and determined the nature of King Tut’s post-mortal second act. Here AramcoWorld talks with her about pulling together the real story behind the blue-and-white-striped death mask—and everything the blank-eyed golden face of Tutankhamun has come to represent, both to herself and to the world.The Mysteries of the Mustatils
History
Science & Nature
In northwest Saudi Arabia, scattered across an area twice the size of Portugal, archeolog|sts and aerial surveyors have identified more than 1,000 roughly built, low, rectangular stone structures that date back 7,000 years to an era when today's deserts were savannas. These mustatils-"rectangle" in Arabic-have been long-known to regional tribes, and in 2018 archeologists began to investigate and excavate. Discoveries of animal bones and horns point toward ritual purposes. The great number of mustatils may be evidence of population and social organization. But why are there so many-and in so many different places? While no two are quite the same in length and width, all are close in height and shape. Amid more questions than clues, archeologists continue to dig.