TheScientist.com - Magazine of the Life Sciences, Every Day, Online
  Please Login or Register
  • Home
  • Community
  • Current Issue
  • Browse Archive
  • Careers
  • Video & Multimedia
  • Subscribe

Front Cover
Advertisement
NRW: North Rhine-Westphalia
Supplements
  • Life Sciences in
    Ireland
  • Life Sciences in
    the Greater
    Phila. Region
  • Schizophrenia
  • Autoimmunity


Survey Series
  • Best Places to Work
  • $alary $urvey
  • The Scientist Video Awards
  • Lab Web Site and
    Video Awards

The Scientist Daily
  • Science headlines delivered daily.
    Register today.

Institutions
  • For Librarians
  • Recommend Us to Your Librarian

For Advertisers
  • Advertise with Us
  • Contact Ad Team
  • 2009 Media Kit




By Jack Woodall

The Tales Pollen Tells

The rise of forensic palynology, a once obscure science.


In 1988 Marion True, at that time the J. Paul Getty Museum's antiquities director, paid a record $18 million for a 5th century BC Greek statue that she said would become "the single greatest piece of classical art in our collection." It is still one of its most prized artifacts. Almost 20 years later, True is on trial in Rome for trafficking in looted art, and her conviction or release may hinge on an analysis of the pollen found in the folds of the excavated statue's robes. If the pollen is of Sicilian origin, it may have been looted from a site there after Italy's 1939 prohibition on exporting antiquities without a permit. But if it is of North African origin, where similar statues have been found, there is no problem.



For FREE access to this article and more, you must register.

Not yet registered? Get free access
 

The article you are attempting to read is only available to registered users of The Scientist. Registration is FREE and only takes a few seconds.

 
 

Email

Password

> Forgot Password?
> FAQ
> Subscribe

 
Not yet registered? Get free access
 

Create your MyScientist account and access all of The Scientist's free content, tools and life science email newsletters, including:

 

> The current month’s print issue

> Daily & Bi-weekly e-mail newsletters

> Newsblogs with breaking headlines

> The Scientist Community

> Exclusive web extras

> The Scientist Careers

 

Premium content from The Scientist Archive, a comprehensive resource of over 22 years of past life science coverage, is available only by subscription. Subscribe today and get unlimited access

 

 





About TS | Contact | Advertise | Editorial Advisory Board | Privacy Policy
© 1986-2009 The Scientist