An ancient statue, re-created

Tuesday, December 4, 2012 - 10:20 in Paleontology & Archaeology

As part of a repair job 3,300 years in the making, Harvard’s Semitic Museum is seeking to undo some of the destruction wrought when Assyrians smashed the ancient city of Nuzi in modern-day Iraq, looting the temple and destroying artifacts. In a high-tech project that would have been impossible even four years ago, technicians are attempting to re-create a 2-foot-long ceramic lion that likely flanked an image of the goddess Ishtar in a temple in long-ago Nuzi, which is the modern archaeological site of Yorghan Tepe. The project will blend fragments of the original statue held by the museum with pieces created through 3-D scans of its intact mirror image, which likely sat on Ishtar’s other side. Adam Aja, assistant curator of collections, carefully examines a piece of the model. Museum assistant director Joseph Greene said the project is partly driven by the desire to re-create the damaged lion and partly by a...

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