Tuesday, 13 May 2008
Digital Digging - new content
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Tuesday, May 13, 2008
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Monday, 12 May 2008
'Seahenge' exhibition boosts King's Lynn museum visitor numbers by 73%
A Norfolk museum has recorded a large increase in visitors since opening a unique display of the Bronze Age wood circle known as Seahenge.
The Lynn Museum in King's Lynn underwent a £1.2m redevelopment before the exhibition was opened last month.
Norfolk Museums Service said 1,500 visited in its opening month, 73% more year-on-year before the display opened.
Seahenge was moved from its site at Holme-next-the-Sea and preserved in 1999, a year after being discovered.
Seahenge - 55 oak posts in a circle with a central stump - sat unnoticed and undisturbed off the Norfolk coast for almost 4,000 years.
Full-size replica
Archaeologists at the Bronze Age Centre, believe between 50 and 80 people may have helped build the circle, possibly to mark the death of an important individual.
Seahenge became exposed at low tides after the peat dune covering it was swept away by winter storms.
The museum said if the rate of visits continues it will exceed forecasts.
Charles Wilde, from the Norfolk Museums Service, said: "Lynn Museum has been a much-loved attraction with local people for years.
"The recent re-development and the arrival of the Seahenge display have created a contemporary museum that has much wider appeal.
"Early indications are that the museum is attracting more people on a day trip to King's Lynn and as such the museum is contributing much more to local tourism."
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Sunday, 11 May 2008
PastHorizons Online heritage tv channel launched
press release
We are proud to announce the creation of a dedicated Heritage Media website.
Past Horizons Heritage Media
Its the first of its kind dealing exclusively with archaeology and heritage. This video sharing site is similar in many ways to You Tube, and like that site, you can view videos or sign up and upload your own, comment and rate other peoples videos too.
There are several categories ranging from Excavations and Training to Humour and Places to Visit. We have already over a hundred online, and look forward to seeing this grow over the coming months and years, as this becomes the place to visit for sharing our passion for archaeology.
In addition, the site also contains links to the online pageflip archaeology magazine Past Horizons, a weekly Podcast news report from Stonepages & BAJR, a music radio station to match your mood and also the valuable Past Horizons Project search, giving access to hundreds of archaeology projects across the world.
Best of all… it’s Free to access and is your resource to use.
Enjoy the past.
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Sunday, May 11, 2008
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