KOCAELI - The 29th International Symposium of Excavations, Reviews & Archaeometry starts in the northwestern Turkish city of Kocaeli on last week.
Taking the floor in the conference, Orhan Duzgun, chief of Cultural Assets and Museums Department at Turkish Culture & Tourism Ministry, stated that they were working hard in consider to guard of cultural heritage in the country and getting back Turkey's cultural assets overseas to the country.
A formal excavation process starts at Canon's Marsh on the harbour side at Bristol, to disclose more about life in the city more than about 500 years ago. The four-month environmental dig would try to piece together the daily activities of monks who lived at the medieval abbey.
The city's Anglican cathedral now stands on the significant site. A nearby dig land clearing process for four years ago unearthed glassworks and coins from the 17th Century.
A new force in land clearing drainage organization covering a huge region of Lincolnshire and Norfolk has been shaped by a pioneering group.
The Water Management Alliance, as it is now recognized, is based at King's Lynn, has been shaped by four internal drainage boards taking almost 300,000 acres from Spalding to Somerleyton and from Hunstanton to Thetford.
Phil Camamile is the current chief supervisory of the group that brings the South Holland IDB to the inveterate King's Lynn consortium formed 40 years ago.
An predictable 1,000 feet of slatted wood fencing gone up along numerous stretches of Sargent Beach Tuesday - to hold the sand, to build dunes and to deter drivers from running over what dunes there are.
Erosion has exposed much of the sand from Sargent Beach, even though narrow, thin strips of sand dunes evened out by ground cover have taken hold - until some body drives over them en route to the Gulf beach.
Sargent resident Tim Wooters donated the fencing, which was put up by jail trusties provided by Matagorda County Sheriff James Mitchell.
Moss Bluff Drainage Board members are now asking for the Calcasieu Sheriff's Department to examine allegations that public gear, employees and resources have been used unlawfully to assist private board members got an earful from some citizens who question whether embezzlement of drainage resources can be why they don't have better drainage.
The allegations are also predictable to come up at this week's police jury meeting.