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Stone found by three-year-old during stroll turns out to be 3,800-year-old scarab amuletArchaeologists have confirmed that a “beautiful stone” picked up by a child in Israel’s Tel Azekah area is actually a Bronze Age scarab amulet made over 3,800 years ago. Ziv Nitzan, 3, found the stone ...
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Live Science on MSNSłupcio: A 6,000-year-old amber 'gummy bear' that may have been a Stone Age amulet"Słupcio" — or "little guy from Słupsk" in Polish — is the name given to the amber bear in 2013, when a Polish kindergartner ...
The little girl found the treasure during a family outing in March Three-year-old Ziv Nitzan found a 3,800-year-old scarab amulet during a family trip to Tel Azekah, Israel in March Dr. Daphna Ben-Tor ...
“I called my parents to come see the beautiful stone, and we realized we had discovered an archaeological find! We immediately reported this to the Israel Antiquities Authority.” The amulet ...
Officials at the Israel Antiquities Authority shared that Ziv Nitzan, the toddler, discovered a 3,800-year-old scarab amulet ...
While visiting the archaeological site Tel Azekah, some 50 miles southeast of Tel Aviv, 3-year-old Ziv Nitzan found a scarab amulet believed ... up this particular stone," said Omer Nitzan ...
After finding the Ghostspeak Amulet in Bramblemead Valley and starting the Restless Ghosts side quest in RuneScape: ...
Men's Journal on MSN16d
Toddler Discovers 3,800-Year-Old Archaeological RelicA three-year-old child in Israel made a remarkable archaeological discovery in the form of a 3,800-year-old relic. While out on a hike with her parents and two sisters at the archaeological site of ...
Ziv Nitzan, 3, found the stone during a stroll along a dirt path that had gravel spread on it, the Israel Antiquities Authority said in a statement. “Out of the 7,000 stones around her ...
USA TODAY on MSN18d
Toddler finds nearly 4,000-year-old Egyptian scarab amulet while vacationing in IsraelZiv Nitzan, a 3½-year-old girl, found a 3,800-year-old scarab amulet during a trip to Tel Azeka, near Beit Shemesh, in Israel.
floats in seawater, is translucent when polished, and smells fragrant when burned — may have been perceived as imbuing the material with magic, making Słupcio a powerful Stone Age amulet.
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