The Archaeology Channel

The Archaeology Channel is a multimedia website offering streaming video and audio on a variety of topics from the world of cultural heritage!

Be sure to visit our website for access to our weekly podcast and monthly STRATA show. www.archaeologychannel.org
https://filmfreeway.com/thearchaeologychannelfilmfestival

Photos from The Archaeology Channel's post 08/16/2024

New on Heritage:
A must-watch – “Homeland Story” is a portrait of one multi-generational Aboriginal family’s struggles to preserve their culture and remain on their homeland, Donydji, in NE Australia. This moving feature was lauded in multiple categories at the 2024 TAC International Film Festival, including Best Film!

Take some time to explore Yangzhou, China – one of the country’s most prosperous and ancient cities. Our latest episode of the “Mysterious China” series, “Yangzhou: City of Timeless Culture,” follows the observations of Marco Polo, who meticulously recorded his observations of Yangzhou’s epic cultural heritage.

“Immerse” yourself in the newest episode of “Strata: Portraits of Humanity,” which revolves around the sea! This month’s episode is an exciting double feature; discover what Mesolithic hunting in the now-submerged land in the North Sea might have been like in the imaginative animated short “Doggerland” from , and join in the search for shipwrecks in Port Royal Sound, South Carolina with “Shoals and Shipwrecks of Port Royal Sound.”

View these exciting new films and more on Heritage Broadcasting Service (heritagetac.org)

08/12/2024

New films are coming to Heritage this week on Thursday, August 15th! Take a look at what new adventures are in store for you!

Featured: “Homeland Story” (awarded Best Film at this year’s TAC International Film Festival!), “Yangzhou: City of Timeless Culture,” from the “Mysterious China” series, and “Strata: Portraits of Humanity Season 10, Episode 11.”

View these titles and more on heritagetac.org!

Photos from The Archaeology Channel's post 07/29/2024

New on Heritage:
What was daily life like for Gallic warriors off the battlefield? By unearthing their houses and discarded debris, archaeology today is able to reveal what family life was like for the Gauls. Tune into our latest episode of “Humanity’s Footsteps” for a glimpse into the domestic lives of these ancient warriors.

In “Walrus Hunt,” the new installment of the groundbreaking series “Hunting with my Ancestors,” Zacharias Kunuk takes us on a hunting trip with a band of modern-day Inuit hunters. We see them catching a walrus, and caching and fermenting its meat for the long winter ahead.

Next, explore China’s Jiangsu Province, a land full of history and wealth, in “Jiangsu: Land of Good Fortune,” from the visually rich series “Mysterious China.”

View these films and more on Heritage Broadcasting Service (heritagetac.org)!

07/22/2024

Wondering what to watch next? We’ve got you covered! A fresh group of episodes from our latest series on Heritage will be added Monday, July 29th.

Featured: “Jiangsu: Land of Good Fortune,” from the visually stunning “Mysterious China” series, “Walrus Hunt,” from the groundbreaking series “Hunting With My Ancestors,” and “Humanity's Footsteps, Season 1, Episode 7: The Gallic Family,” from the popular French show.

View these titles and more on heritagetac.org!

Photos from The Archaeology Channel's post 07/16/2024

New on Heritage:
In “Land of Legends,” our newest addition to the “Mysterious China” series, explore the Hubei Province of central China. Its origins date back to the 7th century BC, when it was home to the powerful state of Chu, and the epic history of Hubei includes the heartbreaking tale of Mulan, and the evolution of Wudang Kung Fu, made famous by the movie “Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon.”

Part of the “Hunting with My Ancestors” series, “Kivitoo: What They Thought of Us?” tells the tragic story of Inuit families who were forcibly relocated from their village of Kitivoo with the promise that they could return home. What they found upon returning to Kitivoo was devastating.

In “Strata: Portraits of Humanity Season 10, Episode 10,” discover stunning Bronze Age rock art in Sweden, and follow the first systematic underwater archaeological survey around Kasos Island in the Aegean Sea.

View these films and more on Heritage Broadcasting Service (heritagetac.org)

07/12/2024

New films are coming to Heritage on Monday, July 15th! Take a look at what new adventures are in store for you!

Films: “Land of Legends,” “Kivitoo: What They Thought of Us?,” and “Strata: Portraits of Humanity Season 10, Episode 10.”

View these titles and more on heritagetac.org!

Photos from The Archaeology Channel's post 07/03/2024

New on Heritage:
Feeling stressed? Unwind with “Holy Mountain,” our newest addition to the “Mysterious China” series. This serene episode explores China’s Wudang Mountain, a site that followers of Taoism flock to in order to find healing and harmony.

We are excited to present “Dog Team Bear Hunt,” part of the “Hunting With My Ancestors” series. This riveting episode follows Inuit hunters on a polar bear hunt using the dogteam method, a traditional practice now being revived.

In a continuation of the popular “Humanity’s Footsteps” series, check out our newest episode, “The Gallic Warrior.” New archaeological findings will leave you questioning everything you thought you knew about the ancient Gallic warriors!

View these films and more on Heritage Broadcasting Service (heritagetac.org)

06/26/2024

New films are coming to Heritage on Monday, July 1st! Take a look at what new adventures await you!

Films: “Holy Mountain,” “Dog Team Bear Hunt,” and “Humanity's Footsteps, Season 1, Episode 6: The Gallic Warrior.”

View these titles and more on heritagetac.org!

06/26/2024

Stream all episodes of The Orient Expedition — a 10-part docu-series that follows a family of explorers as they build a boat and set sail on an incredible 30 thousand mile journey lasting more than 800 days — only on Heritage Broadcasting Service.

Subscribe or rent the full series here: heritagetac.org

Photos from The Archaeology Channel's post 06/21/2024

Congratulations to this year’s award winners at The Archaeology Channel International Film Festival! This year, 77 films were submitted to the Festival from 24 countries, of which 27 films from 10 countries were screened in front of audiences at The Shedd Institute in Eugene, Oregon.

See which films were recognized by our jury, and which one took home the Audience Favorite Award.

Which film was your favorite? Let us know in the comments!

Photos from The Archaeology Channel's post 06/18/2024

New on Heritage:
Revel in the magical adventure that “Secrets of the Silk Road” leads you on and discover the fascinating ancient culture of modern China’s remote Western Region as you travel down history’s most fabled trade route: The Silk Road.

In the second episode of the Hunting with My Ancestors series, “Net Fishing Under the Ice,” takes you to the darkest and coldest time in Inuit lands, where Igloolik elder Peter Awa ventures out to set up fish nets in the thick sea ice, guided solely by the light of his headlamp.

In the French Alps, around Mount Pilat, filmmaker Rob Hope explores little-known Neolithic archaeological remains from up to 4,000 years ago. Check it out in “Strata: Portraits of Humanity Season 10, Episode 9.”

View these films and many more on Heritage Broadcasting Service (heritagetac.org).

06/17/2024

New films have arrived on Heritage! Take a look at what new adventures await you!

Films: “Secrets of the Silk Road,” “Net Fishing Under the Ice,” and “Strata: Portraits of Humanity Season 10, Episode 9.”

View these titles and more on heritagetac.org!

Photos from The Archaeology Channel's post 06/04/2024

New on Heritage:
Episode 3 of “Mysterious China” explores cultures at the world’s greatest altitude! The famous Venetian explorer Marco Polo traveled to China on the Silk Road and across the “Roof of the World,” the source of the legendary Mekong, Yangtze, and Yellow rivers. Watch as, even today, nomads roam this vast and rugged land, in all of its stunning, majestic beauty and mysterious remoteness.

What does it take to harvest one bowhead whale today? How did ancient Inuit peoples hunt these mammoth mammals with stone tools? The film “Bowhead Whale Hunt,” part of the new series “Hunting With My Ancestors” on Heritage, documents the traditional Inuit process of hunting a bowhead whale from start to finish.

Ancient Europeans roamed their territory as hunter-gatherers to find food and materials. Why and how did they finally settle down? Find out in “Humanity’s Footsteps: The Last Hunter-Gatherers.”

View these outstanding films and much more on Heritage Broadcasting Service (heritagetac.org).

06/03/2024

📣 Calling all film producers and distributors!

It is now time to announce that our call for entries for the 2025 edition of The Archaeology Channel International Film Festival is officially open!

All entries need to be submitted through FilmFreeway. For more information about entering please visit archaeologychannel.org/festival. The deadline for entries is October 15th 2024 (get your submissions in ASAP!)

Film screenings for TAC Festival 2025 will take place May 14-18, 2025, in the Sheffer Recital Hall at The Shedd Institute here in Eugene, Oregon, USA. Presentations by participants in TAC Conference on Cultural Heritage Media will take place May 15-17, 2025, at a venue to be announced in downtown Eugene.

Please share this announcement with others you know who may have films suitable for entry. Many thanks and best wishes to you all.

Thanks to everyone who contributed to the success of our 2024 film festival. We are excited to see what’s in store next year!

06/03/2024

From South America to Antarctica, across the Pacific to Oceania, to China and finally South Africa! Follow the incredible true story of one family and their inspiring travels.

The Orient Expedition is streaming on Heritage Broadcasting Service. Watch now and discover more at heritagetac.org.

06/03/2024

Congratulations!

🎬 🏆 PALMARES
🤖 OCEAN One k, le robot des abysses

Le film a reçu un PRIX et 4 MENTIONS au TAC The Archaeology Channel International Film Festival 2024.

🏆Best Public Education Value
🏅 Honorable Mention in Best Film Competition
🏅Honorable Mention for Script
🏅Honorable Mention for Inspiration
🏅Honorable Mention in Audience Favorite Competition

🙏 Merci au jury, au public et félicitations aux équipes du film !

Un film de Mathieu Pradinaud, écrit par Alain Zenou
Coproduction: GEDEON Programmes, Drassm, ECPAD , en association avec PLANETE+

05/30/2024

New films are coming to Heritage on Monday, June 3rd! Take a look at what’s coming in this video.

Films: “Marco Polo’s Roof of the World,” “Bowhead Whale Hunt,” and “Humanity's Footsteps, Season 1, Episode 5: The Last Hunter-Gatherers.”

View these titles and more on heritagetac.org!

Photos from The Archaeology Channel's post 05/23/2024

The latest on Heritage:
Have you ever seen a horse fall 50 feet into a turbulent river and survive? Or an entire caravan zip-line its way through treacherous mountain passes? In a new episode of the “Mysterious China” Series, “Marco Polo’s Silk Road” follows Marco Polo’s footsteps on the Northern and Southern Silk Roads, where he meticulously recorded his fascinating observations.

In a new episode of “Strata: Portraits of Humanity,” indigenous Californians from all over the state gather to share their stories at the 2011 California Indian Conference. As they discuss issues of cultural sustainability, tradition, the environment, and substance abuse, they wrestle with one central question: what does it mean to be Native American in the 21st century?

The groundbreaking documentary “Inuit Knowledge and Climate Change” is the world’s first Inuktitut-language film on the topic of climate change. Exploring centuries of Inuit knowledge and allowing the viewer to learn about climate change first-hand from Arctic residents themselves, it displays Inuit expertise regarding their land and its wildlife and makes clear that climate change is a human-rights issue affecting this ingenious Indigenous culture.

View these outstanding films and more on Heritage Broadcasting Service (heritagetac.org)

05/15/2024

Kicking off this year’s TAC International Film Festival with his Keynote Address is Dennis Jenkins, recently retired Senior Research Archaeologist for the Museum of Natural and Cultural History at the University of Oregon. Come to the TAC International Film Festival Banquet tonight, May 15th, at the Gordon Tavern in Eugene to hear Dennis Jenkins’s address, “Archaeology and Science at the Paisley Caves.”

Focused on the first colonization of the Americas, Jenkins pursues questions such as when did people arrive, by what method, and what direction? Who were they? What was their life like? These questions have led Jenkins to investigate obsidian sourcing and hydration, prehistoric shell bead trade, and settlement subsistence patterns of the Northern Great Basin for 37 years.

Jenkins has recently been involved in the internationally recognized recovery of ancient human DNA from coprolites (dried f***s) dating to 14,500 years old, and established the contemporaneity of Western Stemmed projectile points at the Paisley Caves with Clovis technology.

Join us for dinner with Dennis Jenkins at the Gordon Tavern, 6 pm Wednesday, May 15th!

Find out more about TAC International Film Festival Banquet and register to attend at: archaeologychannel.org/festival

Photos from The Archaeology Channel's post 05/15/2024

The Archaeology Channel International Film Festival 2024 begins today! Check out our daily schedules for an overview of festival activities all happening in Downtown Eugene, Oregon!

Wednesday, May 15, 2024:
TAC Festival Banquet at the Gordon Tavern, 555 Oak Street. 6-9 pm.

Thursday, May 16, 2024:
Film screenings and Video Bar at The Shedd, 868 High Street. 7-9 pm.

Friday, May 17, 2024
Film screenings and Video Bar at The Shedd, 868 High Street. 7-9 pm.

Saturday, May 18, 2024
Film screenings and Video Bar at The Shedd, 868 High Street. 9:30 am-7 pm.
Saturday Social at Capitello Wines, 540 Charnelton Street. 7-10 pm.

Sunday, May 19, 2024:
Film screenings and Video Bar at The Shedd, 868 High Street. 10 am-7 pm.
Awards Reception at Capitello Wines, 540 Charnelton Street. 7-9 pm.

Find out more about TAC International Film Festival 2024 at: archaeologychannel.org/festival

05/13/2024

New films are coming to Heritage on Wednesday, May 15! Take a look at what’s coming in this video.

Films: “Marco Polo's Silk Road,” “Inuit Knowledge and Climate Change,” ( IsumaTV ) and “Strata: Portraits of Humanity Season 10, Episode 8.”

View these titles and more on heritagetac.org.

Photos from The Archaeology Channel's post 05/09/2024

Doggerland

Our final screening session for our 21st Annual International Film Festival will begin with, “Doggerland.” An animated film, it features hand-drawn visualizations accompanied by music and other sound effects, but without any speech sounds. These animated drawings dynamically envision pre-Neolithic tools, weapons—such as big game spears—and other artifacts, as well as pre-Neolithic practices, including big game hunting and its hazards, leading to a dramatic portrayal of a hunter’s violent death in a confrontation with his prey and the ensuing burial practices. Add to this the centuries-later rediscovery and display of the skeletal remains of our human ancestors, and of their artifacts, in modern museums.

The Soul of a Man

An experimental film, “The Soul of a Man” depicts a young woman sitting at a coffee table. She has arrived from far away to visit the city of Sabbioneta, the ideal city of Vespasiano Gonzaga’s Italian Renaissance. She feels that someone she cannot see is watching her. Uncomfortable with that feeling, she decides to move away from the cafe. Then she walks across the public square and enters the historic Ducal Palace. As she walks, she tightly grasps a book by Borges in her hand and, in a strange sense of deja-vu, the man who is chasing her fails to catch up with her.

Shoals and Shipwrecks of Port Royal Sound

This film documents historical research and archaeological explorations for shipwrecks at the entrance of Port Royal Sound, South Carolina, USA. By presenting field activities and interviews, the film records the process of searching for shipwrecks, accomplished by means of historical research, remote-sensing operations and diving. These innovative research efforts benefitted from support of the Office of Exploration of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, via a research award to the Maritime Research Division of the South Carolina Institute of Archaeology and Anthropology, University of South Carolina.

Old Drystones: First Farmers of the Mountains

In the French Alps, around Mount Pilat, filmmaker Rob Hope explores little known Neolithic archaeological remains from up to 4,000 years ago. He holds up in a stone cabin that is open to all trekkers in those parts and follows the traces of long-past human life all around the area. He notes a mysterious large-scale system of drystone walls, mounds and cairns, whose builders and exact time of building remain unsolved. Tracing this ancient and forgotten drystone wall system across the high mountainous area, he finds a mountaintop Iron Age stone fort amid mixtures of the remains of later periods, including Roman and Medieval architectural ruins. As he journeys deeper into these remote and wild places still remaining there today, he also delves deeper into a distant human past.

The Enigma of Keros

Archaeological excavations at the site of Dhaskalio, led by Colin Renfrew and Michael Boyd of the McDonald Institute of the University of Cambridge, have completely transformed our understanding of what was previously seen as a Cycladic enigma. The currently uninhabited island of Keros, in the Cyclades Islands of Greece, was the site of the world’s earliest known maritime sanctuary, in use during the Early Bronze Age. It was also a thriving center of early metallurgy, including Bronze and other metals production. The site also provides voluminous evidence about major early developments in architecture.

“Doggerland,” “The Soul of a Man,” “Shoals and Shipwrecks of Port Royal Sound,” “Old Drystones: First Farmers of the Mountains,” and “The Enigma of Keros” will be screened at The Archaeology Channel International Film Festival, Sunday, May 19th, 4 – 7 pm.

Photos from The Archaeology Channel's post 05/09/2024

Diving in Aegean History

This film follows the first systematic underwater archaeological survey around Kasos Island in the Aegean Sea. Kasos Island has had a remarkable maritime prominence, from Homeric times through the 20th century. Maritime archaeologist Xanthi Argyris led the team of archaeologists, scientists and technicians. They conducted intensive diving in search of ancient shipwrecks. At the time of this filming, they were just completing a fourth year of their maritime archaeological survey in the area. After surveying 60 km of shoreline, they discovered ten shipwrecks, representing periods from ancient times to the present. After 220 dives and 320 hours spent underwater, 108 selected archaeological finds were recovered. Studying the shipwrecks’ locations has added new “tiles” to the already massive mosaic of the Aegean Sea’s underwater archaeological expanse.

Francisco Albo: Greek Seamen in the First Voyage around the World

Few Greeks—and even few Spaniards—know that Greek sailors served on the ships of the mission of Magellan and Elcano, who 500 years ago attempted the long and turbulent journey that was to become the first known round-the-world voyage. This film is a rigorous documentary, but as told via a fictional vehicle. It contains a dialogue, wherein History interrogates the little-known Greek naval pilot who managed to return to Spain with the only surviving ship of this first circumnavigation, thereby bequeathing to the future, and to humanity’s written heritage, the nautical diary from that singular expedition.

Bone Stories

Within every bone is a story, the hidden echo of a long past life. Bones bear the traces of the life experience of an individual, of a community, of a people. They help us to reconstruct dramatic events, and even to reveal the face of one of our ancestors. At the University of Siena, in Italy, anthropologist and anatomical illustrator Stefano Ricci Cortili devotes his life to this special kind of archaeological research. The knowledge he has gained has already brought to light many secrets, hidden within bones.

Wonder of Andalusia: Medina Azahara

Medina Azahara, in Spain’s Sierra Morena mountains, was given its Arabic name, which means “The Shining City,” by the 10th century caliph who had it built. Nicknamed the “Versailles of al-Andalus,” it is considered one of the most important Islamic archaeological sites worldwide. Five years ago, a team of European archaeologists began a new excavation project at this World Heritage site. For over 100 years, excavations here have concentrated inside the Caliph’s palace. This new excavation project is focused outside the palace walls, in areas of the city never before studied. A massive new building came to light, its function unknown. Beyond the mystery of this building, the very location of this city is an enigma in itself. Why was a Muslim city of such importance built in a then primarily Christian area, far from most of Al Andalusia, then the name for Muslim Spain?

“Diving in Aegean History,” “Francisco Albo: Greek Seamen in the First Voyage around the World,” “Bone Stories,” and “Wonder of Andalusia: Medina Azahara,” will be screened at The Archaeology Channel International Film Festival, Sunday, May 19th 1 – 3:45 pm.

Photos from The Archaeology Channel's post 05/09/2024

Notre-Dame de Paris: Preventive Excavation at the Transept Crossing

The last day of our film festival will first take us to contemporary France. The day after the Notre-Dame fire of April 15, 2019, archaeologists were called to the cathedral. Three years later, an excavation, conducted by the French National Institute of Preventive Archaeological Research, yielded important data on the construction and evolution of the cathedral, as well as on burials and findings of numerous other elements. Among these is the medieval rood screen, separating the chancel from the nave and destroyed in the reign of Louis XIV, but found nonetheless in an exceptional state of preservation. With Dorothée Chaoui-Derieux, conservator-in-chief; Christophe Besnier, lead archaeologist for the Institute; Philippe Villeneuve, chief architect; and Philippe Jost, director of restoration Notre-Dame; we learn about key results of this historic restoration project.

Neanderthal: The First Artist

Ancient cave art was born, we used to believe, around 30,000 years ago, from the spirit and from the hands of our direct ancestor-humans: Homo sapiens. But in Touraine, France, a recent discovery could shake that belief. Deep in an obscure cave, La Roche Cotard, prehistorians have identified surprising engravings. To what age do these very singular drawings belong? Are they ancient works of our direct ancestors? Or could they have been crafted by a more ancient human variant: Homo sapiens neanderthalensis? These mysterious drawings may revamp what we thought we knew about the origins of art.

A Bronze Halberd: A Symbol of Civilizational Change

This fictionalized documentary journeys through the lands of Poland and more widely in Europe about 4,000 years ago. The time in our focus is the transition from the Neolithic Age to the Bronze Age. This period witnessed a rapid technological and civilizational leap, by which the standard and quality of life significantly improved, and the very way in which societies functioned changed. The people at large saw a major enrichment of their lives. Bronze products, which began then to be utilized in everyday life, became an external symbol of social status and wealth. This subject matter, outlined in a fictionalized way, supports the cognitive, informative and educational value of this film. Via its choice of locations, its scenography, 3D animations, and precisely planned frames, this film revivifies a world that has long since vanished.

“Notre-Dame de Paris: Preventive Excavation at the Transept Crossing,” “Neanderthal: The First Artist,” and “A Bronze Halberd: A Symbol of Civilizational Change” will be screened at The Archaeology Channel International Film Festival, Sunday, May 19th 10 am – 12:45 pm.

Photos from The Archaeology Channel's post 05/08/2024

When the Romans Called Upon Their Gods: Graffiti Dedicated to the God Mercury

The second half of Saturday’s screenings will begin with the film, “When the Romans Called Upon Their Gods: Graffiti Dedicated to the God Mercury.” In the western Alps, the present-day city of Châteauneuf in Savoy includes remains of an ancient district, dedicated to a cult of spiritual practices, with baths, a theater and a temple. Built in the 1st century AD under the auspices of a Roman emperor, it contains sacred rooms, including cellae reserved for its priests, and a covered gallery, wherein the faithful could gather. In its center, an inscription on a plaque indicates that this sanctuary was in honor of the Gallic god Limetus, a parallel to the Roman god Mercury, protector of travelers and good health. Wishes, offerings and thanks were addressed to Limetus, including 70 surviving graffiti. Some of them mention Maia, a female consort of Mercury. Some are veritable historical accounts, of otherwise unknown events in which congregants appealed to Limetus.

Diving into History: 50 Years of Exploring Our Maritime Heritage

England—today an island nation-state—has been separated from the European continent by the ocean waters of the English Channel for the last 8,000 years. Seafaring across the English Channel, and via the Irish Sea—to invade, settle, or trade—has ensued for eons, from the Bronze Age all the way through to the 20th Century. And so have shipwrecks, caused by reefs, storms, piracy, and war. Each shipwreck tells a different tale from the long and rich record of British maritime history. In 1973, the British Parliament passed the Protection of Wrecks Act, which enabled the designation of restricted areas around significant shipwrecks to be monitored, researched and presented to the public by a system of volunteer maritime heritage conservationists. By 2023, 57 shipwrecks had received crucial protections under the Act.

Finding Enok: Coping with Our Colonial Past

In 1911, in the Dutch Indies, Emile van Rouveroy, a young Dutch planter, fathered a daughter with his housekeeper, named Enok, a local Sundanese girl, and then only 15 years of age. He legitimized Enok and raised their daughter, Nelly, in his own, white family. Nelly and her mother never saw each other again. One-hundred-ten years later, two of Emile’s grandchildren, Dorna van Rouveroy and Maurice Boyer, search for traces of Enok and of her fellow sufferers and descendants. They focus on what skin color and ethnic origin have meant; what they mean today; what it means to be an “Indo,” or partly colored, in modern Indonesia and in Dutch society; and what it means today to descend from a colonial family and to be bi-racial.

Homeland Story

Donydji is a small Indigenous homeland in North East Arnhem Land in the far north of Australia. Homelands are situated within the traditional lands of the people who live in them. They are of central importance to those peoples’ identity and culture. This film charts the Donydji community’s transition from nomadic life to the digital age, starting in the 1960s and all the way to the present day. One family is featured, across three generations, from the traditional elder, Dhulutarama, who still knew how to make stone tools, to his granddaughter, Joanne Yindiri Guyula, who teaches at the Donydji school. This is a moving and representative portrait of one family’s struggle to preserve their culture and remain on their homeland despite the severe obstacles they face: sub-standard education, deplorable service delivery, lack of job opportunities for youth, inadequate government policy, bureaucratic mismanagement, and pressure from mining interests.

“When the Romans Called Upon Their Gods: Graffiti Dedicated to the God Mercury,” “Diving into History: 50 Years of Exploring Our Maritime Heritage,” “Finding Enok: Coping with Our Colonial Past,” and “Homeland Story,” will be screened at The Archaeology Channel International Film Festival, Saturday, May 18th 3:30 – 7 pm.

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Our Story

The Archaeology Channel (TAC) is a streaming media website brought to you by Archaeological Legacy Institute (ALI). ALI is a nonprofit organization devoted to nurturing and bringing attention to the human cultural heritage, by using media in the most efficient and effective ways possible. TAC offers its weekly podcasts that are complied of up-to-date archaeological and cultural heritage news and information. TAC also conducts an annual film festival that promotes cultural and archaeological inspired films.

Find out more on our website: https://www.archaeologychannel.org

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