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posted by janrinok on Wednesday October 19 2016, @07:25PM   Printer-friendly
from the search-for-roman-vending-machine-begins dept.

The eyes of a visiting archaeologist lit up when he was shown the 10 tiny, rusty discs that had sat unnoticed in storage for two and a half years at a dig on a southern Japan island.

He had been to archaeological sites in Italy and Egypt, and recognized the "little round things" as old coins, including a few likely dating to the Roman Empire.

"I was so excited I almost forgot what I was there for, and the coins were all we talked about," said Toshio Tsukamoto of the Gangoji Institute for Research of Cultural Property in Nara, an ancient Japanese capital near Kyoto.

The discovery, announced last month, is baffling. How did the coins, some dating to the third or fourth century, wind up half a world away in a medieval Japanese castle on the island of Okinawa? Experts suspect they may have arrived centuries later via China or Southeast Asia, not as currency but as decoration or treasure.


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  • (Score: 2) by Bot on Thursday October 20 2016, @04:38PM

    by Bot (3902) on Thursday October 20 2016, @04:38PM (#416765) Journal

    > He had been to archaeological sites in Italy and Egypt, and recognized the "little round things" as old coins

    Having never been to archaeological sites, I'd still go with the coin hypothesis...

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