Items from ancient Sumerian city found in a cupboard

Bristol University researchers discover a box containing materials from archaeologist Sir Leonard Woolley’s dig of the Sumerian city of Ur tucked away on top of a cupboard.

June 26, 2014 10:32 am | Updated May 23, 2016 06:48 pm IST - LONDON

In this undated photo provided by researcher Tamar Hodos via University of Bristol, the materials discovered in a box from Sir Leonard Woolley’s archaeological dig of the Sumerian city of Ur on display, in Bristol, England.

In this undated photo provided by researcher Tamar Hodos via University of Bristol, the materials discovered in a box from Sir Leonard Woolley’s archaeological dig of the Sumerian city of Ur on display, in Bristol, England.

Amazing what you can find when you do a good clean out.

Bristol University in Britain learned this firsthand when researchers discovered a box containing materials from archaeologist Sir Leonard Woolley’s dig of the Sumerian city of Ur tucked away on top of a cupboard.

“I would classify it in the same category as ‘I found a Monet in my grandmothers’ attic’,” Tamar Hodos, a senior lecturer in archaeology, said on Wednesday.

Researchers determined that the box’s contents were 4,500 years old consisting of pottery, seeds, carbonized apple rings and animal bones and had come from a tomb at an excavation in Iraq that was jointly sponsored during the 1920s and 1930s by the British Museum and the University of Pennsylvania Museum.

The materials had been analysed and described in earlier journals. But researchers are still thrilled because archaeologists at the time did not always collect such organic items.

Index cards inside the crate scrupulously catalogue where the materials were found, together with identification numbers unique to the dig. The material has been given to the British Museum, which is assessing it.

“There’s no question that this material is from the Woolley dig,” Dr. Hodos said.

But no one knows how the material got to Bristol, which had no connection to the dig. The university is hoping for someone to step forward to help solve the mystery.

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