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accueil > archive des infos > les médias nous informent mars 2010 english version
Les médias nous informent : mars 2010
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Stop Press

Recueil d’articles de presse sur des sujets liés au patrimoine. Les points de vue exprimés dans ces derniers n’engagent évidemment que leurs auteurs.

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31 mars

  • Nero's palace partially collapses in Rome
    stuff.co.nz, New Zealand
    A huge chunk of a 2,000-year-old gallery in the complex including Emperor Nero's fabled Golden Palace has collapsed, Rome's art officials said.
  • Leonardo: An early Dr Strangelove?
    BBC News, United Kingdom
    Was the great Florentine artist and scientist who painted the Last Supper, designed the legendary Sforza horse and did the first great studies of human anatomy also a sinister military genius whose inventions caused horrible deaths in the wars of sixteenth century Europe?

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30 mars

  • Chichén Itzá, propiedad de los mexicanos
    Milenio.com, Mexico
    La zona arqueológica de Chichén Itzá es ya propiedad de los mexicanos, luego de que el gobierno de Yucatán compró la tarde de este lunes 83 hectáreas a un costo de 220 millones de pesos al hasta ayer propietario Hans Jurgen Thies Barbachano, uno de los herederos de la familia Barbachano, quien durante décadas tuvo la propiedad legal de la zona.

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29 mars

  • The stone spheres of Costa Rica
    BBC News, United Kingdom
    The stone spheres of Costa Rica - known locally as Las Bolas - have been the focus of University of Kansas researcher John Hoopes, who has evaluated the spheres for protection as a Unesco World Heritage Site.

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26 mars

  • An architect’s snapshots of Africa’s cities
    Finanacial Times, United Kingdom
    Edwin Heathcote: In this exhibition, the architect David Adjaye is attempting to explore the diversity embodied in the African city, partly to document, but also partly to dispel the clichés, the notions of these extraordinary places as dystopian monocultures of poverty, of the lost cause.

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24 mars

  • Rare manuscripts to be auctioned
    BBC News, United Kingdom
    A collection of manuscripts previously owned by kings, bishops and members of the aristocracy is expected to fetch up to £16m when it is sold at auction.

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23 mars

  • Vatican to digitise manuscripts
    ANSA
    The Vatican is set to start digitising the thousands of manuscripts in the Vatican Library, the Holy See's daily announced Tuesday.
  • Parcs de l'Ahaggar et du Tassili: L'Algérie dénonce « la biopiratérie »
    Algérie Culture, Algeria
    La ministre de la Culture, Khalida Toumi, dénonce le phénomène de « biopiraterie » qui est « un impérialisme vert, dont on a connu que les premiers effleurements », à l'occasion des journées d'information sur la conservation de la biodiversité dans les parcs de l'Ahaggar et du Tassili inaugurées hier à Tamanrasset.

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22 mars

  • After Years of War and Abuse, New Hope for Ancient Babylon
    NY Times, United States
    The most immediate threat to preserving the ruins of Babylon, the site of one of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World, is water soaking the ground and undermining what is left in present-day Iraq of a great city from the time of King Nebuchadnezzar II. A current study, known as the Future of Babylon project, documents the damage from water mainly associated with the Euphrates River and irrigation systems nearby.

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20 mars

  • Ghost town revival
    Financial Times, United Kingdom
    Raphael Abraham: The historical comparison might seem a stretch but Malta is a place in which the past is ever present and it confronts the visitor at almost every turn – something that has led Italian architect Renzo Piano to note that “Valletta is full of ghosts”.

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19 mars

  • Velociraptor's cousin discovered
    BBC News, United Kingdom
    Victoria Gill: Scientists have discovered a new species of dinosaur that was closely related to the Velociraptor.

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18 mars

  • 'Hobbit' island's deeper history
    BBC News, United Kingdom
    Jonathan Amos: Long before a 'hobbit' species of human lived on Indonesia's Flores island, other human-like creatures colonised the area. That much was clear.

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17 mars

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16 mars

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14 mars

  • A Conversation With Philippe de Montebello
    NY Times, United States
    Carol Vogel: Philippe de Montebello, the former director of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, has returned to New York University’s Institute of Fine Arts to teach.

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13 mars

  • The New Guard of Curators Steps Up
    NY Times, United States
    Carol Vogel: Far from the stereotype of fusty academics, curators in their 30s and 40s are bringing eclectic backgrounds and a fresh eye to Manhattan’s museums.
  • Out of Ruin, Haiti’s Visionaries
    NY Times, United States
    Holland Cotter: The Centre d’Art, where these artists once met with André Breton, Aimé Césaire and Wifredo Lam, was seriously damaged, as was the Musée d’Art Haitien.
  • New York’s Met, Replicating Art Works Bit by 3-D Bit
    NY Times, United States
    Randy Kennedy: In the last several years, the Met has been pioneering the use of three-dimensional imaging, using white-light scanners to collect millions of bits of information from the surfaces of dozens of objects in its collection.
  • Thieves loot Lao city's Buddha statue heritage
    Sydney Morning Herald, Australia
    Norimasa Tahara: More than a 10th of the Buddha statues in Luang Prabang, an ancient city in north-central Laos whose urban district is a World Heritage Site, have gone missing in the past few years.
  • A spellbinding Egyptian discovery
    Reuters
    Archaeologists in Egypt have found what they believe are hieroglyphic funeral spells guiding a mysterious 4,000-year-old queen in the afterlife.

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11 mars

  • Antigua, Guatemala: Doors of perfection
    Telegraph, United Kingdom
    Trevor Stutely: Cradled by the soaring peaks of the volcanoes Agua and Fuego, the Guatemalan city of Antigua is among the finest examples of Spanish-era architecture in the Americas, a place of baroque churches and rigorously maintained colonial homes.

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10 mars

  • Ancient Tribal Meeting Ground Found in Australia
    Discovery News, United States
    Australian archaeologists have uncovered what they believe to be the world's southernmost site of early human life, a 40,000-year-old tribal meeting ground, an Aboriginal leader said Wednesday.

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9 mars

  • Rights battle over Polaroid sale
    The Art Newspaper, United Kingdom
    Charlotte Burns: Former judge urges artists to go to court over original contracts before June auction.
  • More than a set of prints
    The Art Newspaper, United Kingdom
    Mark Haworth-Booth: It was a misfortune for the Polaroid Collection to fall into the hands of a crook. To sell it off would look like carelessness.
  • Primitive Agricultural Tools Found in Villa Clara
    CubaHeadlines.com, Cuba
    A new archeological discovery of primitive tools in the area surrounding the Cedro Lagoon in the province of Villa Clara is giving rise to new theories of the existence of ceramist agricultural settlements in the northern region of Villa Clara.

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8 mars

  • Focus on Malabar's Mediterranean links
    The Hindu, India
    The existence of a large number of port-holed cists and dolmens in Palakkad, Wayanad and Idukki districts seeks to show that the megalithic people who lived in these parts of the world were navigators who migrated to Kerala from the Mediterranean region by sea route.

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4 mars

  • New art restoration technology wows the world
    Business Weekly, United Kingdom
    The world-renowned Hamilton Kerr Institute has joined forces with Cambridgeshire company, SmartDrive to provide revolutionary technology which will enable art restorers, curators, gallery visitors and web-users to view masterpieces in a way never seen before.

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3 mars

  • Terracotta Warriors Safe after Chile Earthquake
    CRIEnglish, China
    Chinese relics, including some of the famed terracotta warriors, on display in Chile since December have survived the quake that rocked the South American country on Feb. 27.
  • Documenting the Damage in Chile
    New York Times, United States
    An 8.8-magnitude quake struck Chile early Saturday morning, shaking the capital of Santiago, bringing down buildings and setting off tsunami warnings along the Pacific rim. New York Times readers are sharing their photographs of the quake's aftermath, and are invited to submit photos.
  • Le sarcophage d'une reine inconnue découvert en Egypte
    Le Monde, France
    Une mission archéologique française a découvert près du Caire le sarcophage en granit rose et au couvercle en basalte d'une reine jusqu'ici inconnue de la VIe dynastie, a annoncé mercredi 3 mars le service des antiquités égyptiennes.

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1 mars

  • Firms head to Haiti
    The Real Deal, United States
    New York City architecture and construction firms are heading to Haiti in an effort to help rebuild the devastated Caribbean nation, which was hit with a magnitude 7 earthquake in January.
  • Heritage versus mining
    Mail and Guardian, South Africa
    Yolandi Groenewald: A battle royal looms over the awarding of coal-mining rights adjacent to world heritage site and national park Mapungubwe, with the Department of Environmental Affairs smack in the middle.

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mise à jour : 11.05.2010

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