A small tool to view real-world ActivityPub objects as JSON! Enter a URL
or username from Mastodon or a similar service below, and we'll send a
request with
the right
Accept
header
to the server to view the underlying object.
{
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"content": "Complex Urban Processes Discovered In The Indus Civilization<br />Mesopotamia and the Indus civilization were both urban civilizations with large, densely populated and planned cities, 6000–1990 BCE. A new thesis in archaeology points out that the ancient Indus society showed complex patterns of urbanity that were rare in other ancient societies.<br />\"The aim was to analyze the urban infrastructure of the Indus civilization by comparing archaeological data from its largest urban formations. The effects of urbanization on the regional environment have also been treated in the thesis,\" says Sidra Gulzar, doctoral student in archaeology at the University of Gothenburg.<br />The study also compares the urban process and development from the Indus region with the Mesopotamian region on a number of levels. This was done using available archaeological material, focusing on a limited number of artifacts from Mohenjo Daro, Harappa and Ganweriwala, which were analyzed and compared using the SEM-EDX method (Scanning Electron Microscopy with Energy Dispersive X-Ray Analysis).<br /><a href=\"https://archaeologynewsnetwork.blogspot.com/2022/02/complex-urban-processes-discovered-in.html?fbclid=IwAR2eDCTP2HH_IdQqdxta6ykmx8fQW7gc6Luk9x5bvhJceTNRKbEmmrY7N8U#.Yg61bIUO_4s\" target=\"_blank\">https://archaeologynewsnetwork.blogspot.com/2022/02/complex-urban-processes-discovered-in.html?fbclid=IwAR2eDCTP2HH_IdQqdxta6ykmx8fQW7gc6Luk9x5bvhJceTNRKbEmmrY7N8U#.Yg61bIUO_4s</a>",
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"published": "2022-02-20T20:57:12+00:00",
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"content": "Complex Urban Processes Discovered In The Indus Civilization\nMesopotamia and the Indus civilization were both urban civilizations with large, densely populated and planned cities, 6000–1990 BCE. A new thesis in archaeology points out that the ancient Indus society showed complex patterns of urbanity that were rare in other ancient societies.\n\"The aim was to analyze the urban infrastructure of the Indus civilization by comparing archaeological data from its largest urban formations. The effects of urbanization on the regional environment have also been treated in the thesis,\" says Sidra Gulzar, doctoral student in archaeology at the University of Gothenburg.\nThe study also compares the urban process and development from the Indus region with the Mesopotamian region on a number of levels. This was done using available archaeological material, focusing on a limited number of artifacts from Mohenjo Daro, Harappa and Ganweriwala, which were analyzed and compared using the SEM-EDX method (Scanning Electron Microscopy with Energy Dispersive X-Ray Analysis).\nhttps://archaeologynewsnetwork.blogspot.com/2022/02/complex-urban-processes-discovered-in.html?fbclid=IwAR2eDCTP2HH_IdQqdxta6ykmx8fQW7gc6Luk9x5bvhJceTNRKbEmmrY7N8U#.Yg61bIUO_4s",
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"content": "8,500-Year-Old Buildings Discovered In Abu Dhabi<br />Evidence of the earliest known buildings in the Arabian Peninsula, dating back more than 8,500 years, has been uncovered in the UAE, the Department of Culture and Tourism – Abu Dhabi (DCT Abu Dhabi) revealed on Thursday.<br />The finds on the island of Ghagha, west of Abu Dhabi city, includes a number of stone structures. The discovery means that settled life in the UAE began 500 years earlier than previously believed.<br />Carbon-dating<br />DCT Abu Dhabi archaeologists have been conducting scientific analysis of the artefacts since the structures and accompanying objects were unearthed. The extraordinary discovery was revealed by carbon-14 analysis of charcoal fragments, which indicates the structures are at least 8,500 years old. This breaks the previous record for the earliest known structures built in the UAE, which were discovered on Marawah Island.<br />Unearthed structure<br />The structures that have been uncovered are simple round rooms, the walls of which are made from stone and preserved to nearly one metre in height. The rooms were likely houses for a small community who may have lived on the island year-round. Hundreds of artefacts were found in the rooms, including finely worked stone arrowheads that would have been used for hunting. It is likely that the community would also have used the rich resources of the sea.<br /><a href=\"https://archaeologynewsnetwork.blogspot.com/2022/02/8500-year-old-buildings-discovered-in.html?fbclid=IwAR124-n0eyUkMhdhtE2aiQRBdqdOIzUF3idMjkpXDHnd7upmCvdGO1Q-V_k#.Yg6tEU6HBX4\" target=\"_blank\">https://archaeologynewsnetwork.blogspot.com/2022/02/8500-year-old-buildings-discovered-in.html?fbclid=IwAR124-n0eyUkMhdhtE2aiQRBdqdOIzUF3idMjkpXDHnd7upmCvdGO1Q-V_k#.Yg6tEU6HBX4</a>",
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"published": "2022-02-20T20:56:08+00:00",
"source": {
"content": "8,500-Year-Old Buildings Discovered In Abu Dhabi\nEvidence of the earliest known buildings in the Arabian Peninsula, dating back more than 8,500 years, has been uncovered in the UAE, the Department of Culture and Tourism – Abu Dhabi (DCT Abu Dhabi) revealed on Thursday.\nThe finds on the island of Ghagha, west of Abu Dhabi city, includes a number of stone structures. The discovery means that settled life in the UAE began 500 years earlier than previously believed.\nCarbon-dating\nDCT Abu Dhabi archaeologists have been conducting scientific analysis of the artefacts since the structures and accompanying objects were unearthed. The extraordinary discovery was revealed by carbon-14 analysis of charcoal fragments, which indicates the structures are at least 8,500 years old. This breaks the previous record for the earliest known structures built in the UAE, which were discovered on Marawah Island.\nUnearthed structure\nThe structures that have been uncovered are simple round rooms, the walls of which are made from stone and preserved to nearly one metre in height. The rooms were likely houses for a small community who may have lived on the island year-round. Hundreds of artefacts were found in the rooms, including finely worked stone arrowheads that would have been used for hunting. It is likely that the community would also have used the rich resources of the sea.\nhttps://archaeologynewsnetwork.blogspot.com/2022/02/8500-year-old-buildings-discovered-in.html?fbclid=IwAR124-n0eyUkMhdhtE2aiQRBdqdOIzUF3idMjkpXDHnd7upmCvdGO1Q-V_k#.Yg6tEU6HBX4",
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"content": "Roman Blue Glass Bowl Found Intact In The Netherlands<br />It was not Romans who lived at the Winkelsteeg in Nijmegen, but Batavians, the local population. In other words, early inhabitants of Nijmegen. They lived from agriculture, like everywhere outside the city walls. \"They certainly had contact with the Romans\", says Pepijn van de Geer, who is in charge of the excavation. \"After all, the city was within walking distance.\"<br />The ultimate piece of evidence is a blue glass bowl that was pulled out of the ground last year. An archaeological treasure. Completely undamaged, not a single shard is missing. \"This is really special\", says the archaeologist. \"The bowl is of Roman manufacture. It could have come from major cities in Germany such as Xanten or Cologne. There were glass workshops there at the time. But the bowl could also have been made in Italy.\"<br />Such bowls were made by letting molten glass cool and harden over a mould. The stripe pattern was drawn in when the glass mixture was still liquid. Metal oxide causes the blue colour.<br /><a href=\"https://archaeologynewsnetwork.blogspot.com/2022/01/roman-blue-glass-bowl-found-intact-in.html?fbclid=IwAR2d8tw5uImC1V1jFJFqA2ZpHtKNICT1yj8z-sbyg4zsU2hvaR58N1pADEs#.Yg6hfV53Sgg\" target=\"_blank\">https://archaeologynewsnetwork.blogspot.com/2022/01/roman-blue-glass-bowl-found-intact-in.html?fbclid=IwAR2d8tw5uImC1V1jFJFqA2ZpHtKNICT1yj8z-sbyg4zsU2hvaR58N1pADEs#.Yg6hfV53Sgg</a>",
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"published": "2022-02-20T20:54:18+00:00",
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"content": "Roman Blue Glass Bowl Found Intact In The Netherlands\nIt was not Romans who lived at the Winkelsteeg in Nijmegen, but Batavians, the local population. In other words, early inhabitants of Nijmegen. They lived from agriculture, like everywhere outside the city walls. \"They certainly had contact with the Romans\", says Pepijn van de Geer, who is in charge of the excavation. \"After all, the city was within walking distance.\"\nThe ultimate piece of evidence is a blue glass bowl that was pulled out of the ground last year. An archaeological treasure. Completely undamaged, not a single shard is missing. \"This is really special\", says the archaeologist. \"The bowl is of Roman manufacture. It could have come from major cities in Germany such as Xanten or Cologne. There were glass workshops there at the time. But the bowl could also have been made in Italy.\"\nSuch bowls were made by letting molten glass cool and harden over a mould. The stripe pattern was drawn in when the glass mixture was still liquid. Metal oxide causes the blue colour.\nhttps://archaeologynewsnetwork.blogspot.com/2022/01/roman-blue-glass-bowl-found-intact-in.html?fbclid=IwAR2d8tw5uImC1V1jFJFqA2ZpHtKNICT1yj8z-sbyg4zsU2hvaR58N1pADEs#.Yg6hfV53Sgg",
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"content": "Manhattan art dealer is sentenced to five years probation for fake Egyptian artifact factory where he sold spray-painted and varnished phony relics for up to $4k to unsuspected collectors for decades.<br /><a href=\"https://7r6.com/HG8N4dqx\" target=\"_blank\">https://7r6.com/HG8N4dqx</a>",
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"published": "2022-02-13T13:22:32+00:00",
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"content": "Manhattan art dealer is sentenced to five years probation for fake Egyptian artifact factory where he sold spray-painted and varnished phony relics for up to $4k to unsuspected collectors for decades.\nhttps://7r6.com/HG8N4dqx",
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"actor": "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/1260952237128032263",
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"content": "More Than 18,000 Pot Sherds Document Life In Ancient Egypt<br />Egyptologists have recovered more than 18,000 inscribed sherds in ancient Athribis—the remains of vessels and jars that served as writing material some 2,000 years ago. The sherds, known as ostraca, document lists of names, purchases of food and everyday objects, and even writing from a school, including lines written by pupils as a punishment. It is very rare to find such a large volume of ostraca. They were recovered during excavations led by Professor Christian Leitz of the Institute for Ancient Near Eastern Studies (IANES) at the University of Tübingen in cooperation with Mohamed Abdelbadia and his team from the Egyptian Ministry of Tourism and Antiquities.<br /><a href=\"https://archaeologynewsnetwork.blogspot.com/2022/01/more-than-18000-pot-sherds-document.html?fbclid=IwAR3aS7oBFLlHGztyToypVKxBKTYpl9bhOYN9ZkNssfjUg1sD1O39tZaxUyo#.YfmJ7GFe2FQ\" target=\"_blank\">https://archaeologynewsnetwork.blogspot.com/2022/01/more-than-18000-pot-sherds-document.html?fbclid=IwAR3aS7oBFLlHGztyToypVKxBKTYpl9bhOYN9ZkNssfjUg1sD1O39tZaxUyo#.YfmJ7GFe2FQ</a>",
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"url": "https://www.minds.com/newsfeed/1337889894759927824",
"published": "2022-02-08T20:56:47+00:00",
"source": {
"content": "More Than 18,000 Pot Sherds Document Life In Ancient Egypt\nEgyptologists have recovered more than 18,000 inscribed sherds in ancient Athribis—the remains of vessels and jars that served as writing material some 2,000 years ago. The sherds, known as ostraca, document lists of names, purchases of food and everyday objects, and even writing from a school, including lines written by pupils as a punishment. It is very rare to find such a large volume of ostraca. They were recovered during excavations led by Professor Christian Leitz of the Institute for Ancient Near Eastern Studies (IANES) at the University of Tübingen in cooperation with Mohamed Abdelbadia and his team from the Egyptian Ministry of Tourism and Antiquities.\nhttps://archaeologynewsnetwork.blogspot.com/2022/01/more-than-18000-pot-sherds-document.html?fbclid=IwAR3aS7oBFLlHGztyToypVKxBKTYpl9bhOYN9ZkNssfjUg1sD1O39tZaxUyo#.YfmJ7GFe2FQ",
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"content": "More Than 18,000 Pot Sherds Document Life In Ancient Egypt<br />Egyptologists have recovered more than 18,000 inscribed sherds in ancient Athribis—the remains of vessels and jars that served as writing material some 2,000 years ago. The sherds, known as ostraca, document lists of names, purchases of food and everyday objects, and even writing from a school, including lines written by pupils as a punishment. It is very rare to find such a large volume of ostraca. They were recovered during excavations led by Professor Christian Leitz of the Institute for Ancient Near Eastern Studies (IANES) at the University of Tübingen in cooperation with Mohamed Abdelbadia and his team from the Egyptian Ministry of Tourism and Antiquities.<br /><a href=\"https://archaeologynewsnetwork.blogspot.com/2022/01/more-than-18000-pot-sherds-document.html?fbclid=IwAR3aS7oBFLlHGztyToypVKxBKTYpl9bhOYN9ZkNssfjUg1sD1O39tZaxUyo#.YfmJ7GFe2FQ\" target=\"_blank\">https://archaeologynewsnetwork.blogspot.com/2022/01/more-than-18000-pot-sherds-document.html?fbclid=IwAR3aS7oBFLlHGztyToypVKxBKTYpl9bhOYN9ZkNssfjUg1sD1O39tZaxUyo#.YfmJ7GFe2FQ</a>",
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"published": "2022-02-08T20:56:32+00:00",
"source": {
"content": "More Than 18,000 Pot Sherds Document Life In Ancient Egypt\nEgyptologists have recovered more than 18,000 inscribed sherds in ancient Athribis—the remains of vessels and jars that served as writing material some 2,000 years ago. The sherds, known as ostraca, document lists of names, purchases of food and everyday objects, and even writing from a school, including lines written by pupils as a punishment. It is very rare to find such a large volume of ostraca. They were recovered during excavations led by Professor Christian Leitz of the Institute for Ancient Near Eastern Studies (IANES) at the University of Tübingen in cooperation with Mohamed Abdelbadia and his team from the Egyptian Ministry of Tourism and Antiquities.\nhttps://archaeologynewsnetwork.blogspot.com/2022/01/more-than-18000-pot-sherds-document.html?fbclid=IwAR3aS7oBFLlHGztyToypVKxBKTYpl9bhOYN9ZkNssfjUg1sD1O39tZaxUyo#.YfmJ7GFe2FQ",
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"content": "In 1924 , a fisherman named Nguyen Van Lam randomly found some bronze objects in Dong Son village ( Thanh Hoa city ) along the Ma River, in Thanh Hoa territory. This was followed by the excavations by an archaeological-loving French customs officer named L. Paijot, who first unearthed artifacts of a large culture that 10 years later, in 1934 , had been identified. is Dong Son Culture. The name of the small village mentioned above became the name of a brilliant culture of the metal age 2000-3000 years ago. The first speaker of the term \"Dong Son culture\" was scholar R. Heine-Geldern. That year was 1934. After 80 years since being discovered, more than 200 relics and tens of thousands of Dong Son relics have been discovered and studied.<br />Dong Son bronze also has the highest technique because it is known to mix with lead, which makes the alloy have a special toughness (copper alloys in Thailand or elsewhere can be mixed with iron, tin, antimoin like Dong Son. but without lead).<br />Post & pic collected from <a href=\"https://www.facebook.com/photo/?fbid=195430761956106&set=pcb.1042303976191400\" target=\"_blank\">https://www.facebook.com/photo/?fbid=195430761956106&set=pcb.1042303976191400</a>",
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"url": "https://www.minds.com/newsfeed/1337885783868051462",
"published": "2022-02-08T20:40:27+00:00",
"source": {
"content": "In 1924 , a fisherman named Nguyen Van Lam randomly found some bronze objects in Dong Son village ( Thanh Hoa city ) along the Ma River, in Thanh Hoa territory. This was followed by the excavations by an archaeological-loving French customs officer named L. Paijot, who first unearthed artifacts of a large culture that 10 years later, in 1934 , had been identified. is Dong Son Culture. The name of the small village mentioned above became the name of a brilliant culture of the metal age 2000-3000 years ago. The first speaker of the term \"Dong Son culture\" was scholar R. Heine-Geldern. That year was 1934. After 80 years since being discovered, more than 200 relics and tens of thousands of Dong Son relics have been discovered and studied.\nDong Son bronze also has the highest technique because it is known to mix with lead, which makes the alloy have a special toughness (copper alloys in Thailand or elsewhere can be mixed with iron, tin, antimoin like Dong Son. but without lead).\nPost & pic collected from https://www.facebook.com/photo/?fbid=195430761956106&set=pcb.1042303976191400",
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"content": "In 1924 , a fisherman named Nguyen Van Lam randomly found some bronze objects in Dong Son village ( Thanh Hoa city ) along the Ma River, in Thanh Hoa territory. This was followed by the excavations by an archaeological-loving French customs officer named L. Paijot, who first unearthed artifacts of a large culture that 10 years later, in 1934 , had been identified. is Dong Son Culture. The name of the small village mentioned above became the name of a brilliant culture of the metal age 2000-3000 years ago. The first speaker of the term \"Dong Son culture\" was scholar R. Heine-Geldern. That year was 1934. After 80 years since being discovered, more than 200 relics and tens of thousands of Dong Son relics have been discovered and studied.<br />Dong Son bronze also has the highest technique because it is known to mix with lead, which makes the alloy have a special toughness (copper alloys in Thailand or elsewhere can be mixed with iron, tin, antimoin like Dong Son. but without lead).<br />Post & pic collected from <a href=\"https://www.facebook.com/photo/?fbid=195430761956106&set=pcb.1042303976191400\" target=\"_blank\">https://www.facebook.com/photo/?fbid=195430761956106&set=pcb.1042303976191400</a>",
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"published": "2022-02-08T20:39:53+00:00",
"source": {
"content": "In 1924 , a fisherman named Nguyen Van Lam randomly found some bronze objects in Dong Son village ( Thanh Hoa city ) along the Ma River, in Thanh Hoa territory. This was followed by the excavations by an archaeological-loving French customs officer named L. Paijot, who first unearthed artifacts of a large culture that 10 years later, in 1934 , had been identified. is Dong Son Culture. The name of the small village mentioned above became the name of a brilliant culture of the metal age 2000-3000 years ago. The first speaker of the term \"Dong Son culture\" was scholar R. Heine-Geldern. That year was 1934. After 80 years since being discovered, more than 200 relics and tens of thousands of Dong Son relics have been discovered and studied.\nDong Son bronze also has the highest technique because it is known to mix with lead, which makes the alloy have a special toughness (copper alloys in Thailand or elsewhere can be mixed with iron, tin, antimoin like Dong Son. but without lead).\nPost & pic collected from https://www.facebook.com/photo/?fbid=195430761956106&set=pcb.1042303976191400",
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"content": "Gold bracelet with Serapis and ram headed (332 B.C. – 395 A.D.), found in Egypt, Archaeological Museum of Athens. <br /><br />Post & pic collected from <a href=\"https://www.facebook.com/LaboratoireCaraa/photos/a.455567961257712/2058011797679979/\" target=\"_blank\">https://www.facebook.com/LaboratoireCaraa/photos/a.455567961257712/2058011797679979/</a>",
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