Categories
Colorado News

PEAK: Who’s got bank, and who’s running on fumes heading into the GOP primary race

(Colorado Peak Politics)

Colorado Democrat candidates are rolling in the dough while many Republicans are struggling to raise funding heading into the primary.

That’s not a huge surprise, considering entrenched Democrat incumbents have become the party of the rich, while Republicans represent regular working class stiffs who are feeding hundred dollar bills to the gas pump instead of politics.

Incumbent Democrat U.S. Sen. Michael Bennet just raised $2.1 million in the most recent reporting period and has $7 million in the bank to take on the Republican nominee.

Meanwhile, Republicans have to fight it out and use up their resources for next week’s primary election. 

Joe O’Dea has raised about $2.1 million and still has about $1 million in the bank to face off against Ron Hanks on June 28. 

Hanks only has $21,000 left from the $67,000 he raised, but an infusion of money from the Democrat Party that is trying to play kingmaker in this and other races is expected to benefit Hanks.

Progressive’s favorite Colorado millionaire and governor Jared Polis is cooling his jets with $5 million in the bank and no Democrat challenger to sap his funds. 

Meanwhile, Heidi Ganahl raised $1.1 million but goes into the homestretch with $145,000 in the bank while Greg Lopez skates in with $17,000.

Democrats are leading with the most cash raised in all of the congressional races except for the 3rd and 7th Districts.

In the 3rd District,

 » Read More

Categories
Sports

A Momentum Shift? 4 Takeaways from the Lightning’s Game 3 Win vs. Avalanche

(Bleacher Report)

0 of 4

    Bruce Bennett/Getty Images

    Ladies and gentlemen, we have a Stanley Cup Final after all.

    Just when it looked like the Colorado Avalanche—7-0 winners in a jaw-dropping Game 2 rout Saturday—would surely skate the trophy into a Rocky Mountain sunset, things changed.

    Or, more specifically, the Tampa Bay Lightning changed them.

    Buoyed by a raucous Amalie Arena crowd, the two-time defending champions shook off a first-period gut punch and scored six of the last seven goals in a 6-2 win to make the Avalanche’s title romp seem a trifle less predetermined.

    The B/R hockey team was in the building for the momentum-shifting contest and put together a list of pertinent takeaways as the teams prep for Wednesday’s pivotal return.

    Scroll through to see what we came up with and give a thought or two of your own in the comments.

1 of 4

    Andrew Bershaw /Icon_Sportswire

    It was early. And the Lightning were reeling.

    So when Colorado’s Valeri Nichushkin beat Andrei Vasilevskiy with a softie five minutes after the opening faceoff, it didn’t look good for those with three-peat wagers.

    But it didn’t last.

    Tampa Bay coach Jon Cooper chose to review the call based on a claim that Avalanche defenseman Bowen Byram failed to keep the puck in the attacking zone at the blue line, thus warranting an offside call.

    Sportsnet @Sportsnet

    A no-goal for Nichushkin. Thoughts? 👀#StanleyCup | #GoBolts | #GoAvsGo pic.twitter.com/mymJMRbPOr

    A prolonged review had the 19,000-plus on edge, but the refs got it correct, declaring that the puck had just slipped out and pulling the tally off the scoreboard.

    It was particularly important barely three minutes later when Landeskog’s power-play goal would have given the visitors a 2-0 lead, but the Lightning weathered the storm and took the lead soon after when Anthony Cirelli and Ondrej Palat scored at 13: 03 and 14: 54.

    They never trailed again. And if the champs win Game 4 to get back in the series, Jared Bednar will see it in his nightmares.

2 of 4

    There’s a reason these guys have their names on the Stanley Cup.

    Twice.

    After two games in which they were outshot by 29 and outscored by eight, the stars largely responsible for two boat parades in the nearby Hillsborough River—namely Vasilevskiy, Palat, Steven Stamkos, Victor Hedman and Nikita Kucherov—showed up.

    Each of the four skaters contributed two points, accounting for two goals and six assists, while their perpetually heroic goaltender stopped all but two of 39 shots in rebounding from a career-worst performance in Game 2.

    Landeskog’s goal came via a goal-crease pileup in the initial half of the first period.

    But Vasilevskiy was lights-out from then on and repeatedly flummoxed the Avalanche while his teammates scored five times on 22 shots against Darcy Kuemper and prompted a goalie change in the second.

    If Vasilevskiy outplays the Colorado tandem to that extent, the needle will swing dramatically.

3 of 4

    Bruce Bennett/Getty Images

    It’s the price you pay as two-time defending champs.

    The Lightning have played a lot of hockey over the last three postseasons—65 games, to be exact—so it’s hardly a shock that they’ve suffered injuries.

    But at some point, it might just matter.

    Center Brayden Point was out for a month between the end of the opening round and Wednesday’s opener with Colorado and played nearly 35 minutes across Games 1 and 2, but he was unavailable for Game 3 with the same lower-body injury.

    Winger Nicholas Paul was dinged up in the first period Monday and left the ice before returning to score early in the second to make it 3-1. He earned the game’s third star after logging two shots and a takeaway in 13: 43 of ice time.

    Tampa Bay wouldn’t be where it is again without a full complement of depth players to fill its holes, but the longer

This article was published at Bleacher Report. Read it in its entirety here. Read More

Categories
Sports

Lightning’s Jon Cooper Says ‘the Right Team Won’ After Game 1 Loss vs. Avalanche

(Bleacher Report)

AP Photo/David Zalubowski

Tampa Bay Lightning head coach Jon Cooper told reporters that “the right team won tonight” after the host Colorado Avalanche earned a 4-3 overtime win over the Bolts in Game 1 of the Stanley Cup Final on Wednesday.

Colorado outshot Tampa Bay 38-23 and held a 3-1 first-period lead after Artturi Lehkonen’s power-play goal at the 17: 31 mark. However, Tampa Bay struck back with two second-period goals to tie the game at three.

Neither team scored in the third, but overtime lasted just 1: 23 after Andre Burakovsky put home the game-winner.

Despite the tough loss, the head coach of the back-to-back defending Stanley Cup champions took away some positives.

Joe Smith @JoeSmithTB

Jon Cooper said there were some positive signs in game. They weren’t themselves “by a country mile” and still had chance at end. Felt “we dipped our toes in the water” in first 10 minutes

To their credit, the Lightning go

This article was published at Bleacher Report. Read it in its entirety here. Read More

Categories
Sports

Andre Burakovsky Praised for OT Winner as Avs Beat Lightning in Game 1

(Bleacher Report)

Bruce Bennett/Getty Images

How about that for a Game 1?

Andre Burakovsky gave the Colorado Avalanche a 1-0 advantage in the Stanley Cup Finals on Wednesday night, scoring the game-winning goal one minute and 23 seconds into overtime to give the Avs a 4-3 win over the Tampa Bay Lightning.

NHL @NHL

OT WINNER FROM ANDRE BURAKOVSKY!!! 🔥 #StanleyCup pic.twitter.com/Bp3mQJyUyV

ESPN @espn

“This is a dream since I was a kid.”

@andreburakovsky after scoring the game-winning goal in Game 1 of the #StanleyCup Final pic.twitter.com/m3KXYcKILu

Not surprisingly, his huge goal was the talk of Twitter after the game:

Grant Paulsen @granthpaulsen

Andre Burakovsky just scored an OT game-winner in the Stanley Cup. That’s my baby boy. pic.twitter.com/s3YI7F3ueV

Samantha Pell @SamanthaJPell

Tonight wasn’t the first time Andre Burakovsky has played hero for his team vs Tampa.

In 2018 with WSH, he scored two goals in a Game 7 win in the Eastern Conference finals vs Tampa. We know what happened next.

Zach @_jewy_

The Tampa bay lightning when they see Andre Burakovsky pic.twitter.com/YCGObVe7sg

Peter Baugh @Peter_Baugh

Andre Burakovsky just scored the biggest goal of his career.

Avs lead the series 1-0.

Pierre LeBrun @PierreVLeBrun

Burakovsky on the one-timer, Avs win 4-3 in OT.
This is going to be such a fun series. High-event hockey.

Jesse Montano @jessemontano_

What an unbelievable pass from Nichushkin. Great look, and great patience to throw that puck back across the grain, and a great finish from Burakovsky.

That was a fantastic game.

Mark Scheig @markscheig

Andre Burakovsky can shoot a puck. Biggest shot of his life so far.

Lukas Weese @Weesesports

Andre Burakovsky with the OT winner for the Avalanche.

This Stanley Cup Final is going to be AWESOME.

Burakovsky was given his flowers, and justifiably so, but this was a wild game that played out over three acts.

Act One: The Avs jumped to 2-0 and 3-1 leads behind goals from Gabriel Landeskog, Valeri Nichushkin and Artturi Lehkonen.

NHL @NHL

LET THE SCORING BEGIN. #StanleyCup

🇺🇸: ABC ➡️ https://t.co/MaghIRjzUG
🇨🇦: @Sportsnet ➡️ https://t.co/MOir2YeltA pic.twitter.com/scGluR3TUT

NHL @NHL

Valeri Nichushkin is up and running! #StanleyCup

🇺🇸: ABC ➡️ https://t.co/MaghIR1Yw6
🇨🇦: @Sportsnet ➡️ https://t.co/MOir2YvWl8 pic.twitter.com/1pxnpnLenY

NHL @NHL

Artturi Lehkonen with the perfeeeeeect deflection! 👌 #StanleyCup

🇺🇸: ABC ➡️ https://t.co/MaghIRjzUG
🇨🇦: @Sportsnet ➡️ https://t.co/MOir2YeltA pic.twitter.com/CuhZaL5AAT

Act Two: The Lightning, showing the poise of a two-time defending champion, pulled even behind goals from Ondrej Palat and Mikhail Sergachev within a minute of one another.

NHL @NHL

KUCH. 😳😲🤯 #StanleyCup

🇺🇸: ABC ➡️ https://t.co/MaghIR1Yw6
🇨🇦: @Sportsnet ➡️ https://t.co/MOir2YvWl8 pic.twitter.com/lZIbzret95

Sportsnet @Sportsnet

Never count out the defending champs 😤

WE. ARE. TIED. #StanleyCup | #GoBolts pic.twitter.com/cuHFpgsld0

Act Three: The two teams, after the explosive opening periods, played to a stalemate in the third period before Burakovsky called game in overtime.

We’ve got all the early makings of an epic series here, folks.

The Lightning will look to bounce back in Colorado during Saturday’s Game 2 at 8 p.m. ET (ABC/ESPN).

This article was published at Bleacher Report. Read it in its entirety here. Read More

Categories
Sports

Way-Too-Early Predictions for 7 Sleeper NHL Teams Next Season

(Bleacher Report)

0 of 7

    AP Photo/Chris O’Meara

    When it comes to the NHL these days, Colorado and Tampa are the places to be.

    The Avalanche and Lightning will begin what could be a seven-game duel for the right to hoist the Stanley Cup this week, starting off in Denver on Wednesday and Saturday before heading to Florida’s Gulf Coast on June 20 and 22.

    Given that the former won the Presidents’ Trophy last season and the latter is a two-time defending Cup champ, neither Colorado nor Tampa Bay is a particularly surprising entrant to the championship round this spring.

    But it isn’t always that way.

    Seeing teams make a prodigious leap from also-ran to title contender is hardly unique in the NHL, and it wouldn’t be too shocking if one of the teams on the outside looking in at this postseason finds its way to prolonged playoff relevance next time around.

    The B/R hockey team seized upon that notion and gazed into the crystal ball to compile a list of seven sleeper teams from 2021-22 and forecast what they’ll do come 2022-23.

    Scroll through to see what we came up with and drop a forward-focused guess or two of your own in the comments section.

1 of 7

    AP Photo/Ashley Landis

    The Anaheim Ducks probably won’t win the Stanley Cup next season.

    They haven’t been in the playoffs since the spring of 2018 and haven’t won a series since the year before, so suggesting an imminent parade past Disneyland would be foolish.

    But they can be better than this year. By a lot.

    Lest anyone forget, the Ducks were among the league’s top teams through the first half of the season thanks in no small way to the dynamism of Trevor Zegras, Troy Terry and Sonny Milano and the opportunistic presence of defensemen like Cam Fowler on the periphery.

    The second half of the season, well…not so much.

    Anaheim plummeted to the Western Conference’s lower echelons from January to May and wound up seventh in the Pacific Division, 21 points from the nearest playoff berth.

    Another year of experience and maturity can’t help but benefit the youngsters up front, and the brass has more than $39 million in cap room to add another weapon and address the need for an elite goaltender—or to provide some blue-line help for John Gibson if it decides he’s the long-term starter.

    Given their first-half performance, their youth and the cap difficulties sure to hamstring some of the teams ahead of them in the Western Conference, it’d be no shock to see the Ducks grab one of the eight playoff spots next season and then give a big scare to a higher-seeded foe.

    Remember where you heard it first.

2 of 7

    AP Photo/Gene J. Puskar

    Columbus burst from the gate with 12 wins in 18 games but leveled out soon after and wound up sixth in a top-heavy Metropolitan Division and 19 points from the second wild-card spot.

    The team must improve its defense and goaltending. Its goals-against average of 3.62 was fifth-worst in the league, and its shots-allowed average of 35.2 was better than that of only one team.

    Elvis Merzlikins got his first extended look at the starting goaltender and had 27 wins in 56 starts, but the 2014 third-round pick’s goals-against average (3.22) and save percentage (.907) were well off his career numbers and well below the league average as well.

    More than $22 million in cap space will allow the Blue Jackets to think about pursuing an option alongside the 28-year-old Latvian. Or, like Anaheim, they can consider boosting his fortunes by adding additional size and strength on the blue line, where only Zach Werenski and Vladislav Gavrikov weighed in at 200 pounds or more.

    Remember, too, that 2021-22 was Brad Larsen’s first year as head coach, so general manager Jarmo Kekalainen is expecting a natural progression from him as well.

    “We never had any doubts about his work ethic and the passion for the game, and those were big reasons why we hired him,” he said. “There’s no doubt that that was going to be just like we projected. But it’s a different job obviously having all the responsibility and pressure, if you want to call it, on your shoulders. Think he’s handled it very well.”

    We agree. They’ll be much closer to the mix than 19 points next time, and if older, salary-shedding teams ahead of them stumble (cough…Pittsburgh…cough), clear them a spot.

3 of 7

    AP Photo/Matt Slocum

    Forecasting the Montreal Canadiens is not for the faint of heart.

    The hockey kings of Quebec finished fourth in the all-Canadian North Division in 2020-21 before an unlikely run to the Stanley Cup Final against eventual champion Tampa Bay.

    Then, with a host of players who had gained experience from that Cinderella stretch, they face-planted in 2021-22, firing their coach and GM on the way to finishing last overall.

    So, go ahead…make a guess as to where they’ll be next season.

    And good luck.

    We think fortunes for 2022-23 depend largely on actions this summer by GM Kent Hughes, a former player agent who arrived after Marc Bergevin was let go. Hughes showed zero hesitation in triggering a rebuild when he let Ben Chiarot and Tyler Toffoli, who’d each played in the Cup Final run, go in deals to Florida and Calgary prior to the trade deadline.

    Next on the au revoir block could be goalie Carey Price, a veteran of 700 NHL starts who was limited to just five last season after rehabbing from knee surgery and spending time in the league’s player-assistance program due to substance abuse.

    He’s due $10.5 million for each of the next four seasons but has a Vezina Trophy and an MVP and would make an attractive target if Hughes took on salary from a trade partner.

    Elliotte Friedman suggested in April that a deal could happen, and it’d certainly give the team a new vibe going forward.

    Considering the Canadiens already have emerging talents in Cole Caufield and Nick Suzuki and the No. 1 overall pick this summer, the 32nd overall finish could quickly turn into season-long relevance and maybe a late miss for next spring’s tournament.

    Not an ideal finish, but certainly a positive move forward.

4 of 7

    AP Photo/Ross D. Franklin

    The New Jersey Devils were 28th in a 32-team league last season.

    They won’t be next season.

    That doesn’t mean anyone should reserve corner space for a parade through downtown Newark anytime soon. But it wouldn’t hurt those on the city’s perimeter—the 973 crowd in West Orange, perhaps—to consider buying in while the bandwagon price is low.

    GM Tom Fitzgerald tried to improve things last summer when he brought in free-agent defenseman Dougie Hamilton and inked backup goaltender Jonathan Bernier to take some heat off Mackenzie Blackwood.

    Hamilton’s gaudy stats plummeted and he played just 62 of 82. And Bernier played all of 10 games behind Blackwood, who was also injured and made just 24 starts—leaving the rest of the load to Nico Daws, Jon Gillies, Andrew Hammond, Scott Wedgewood and Akira Schmid.

    So Fitzgerald clearly has some more time due at the drawing board, and it wouldn’t hurt if he addressed a power play that was fifth-worst in the league, too.

    But there’s good news.

    The Devils have more than $25 million in cap space and should benefit next season assuming Jack Hughes can stay healthy for something near 82 games. The No. 1 draft pick from 2019 reached point-per-game status for the first time in 2021-22, but he only played 49 games (56 points).

    Twenty-three-year-old winger Jesper Bratt was good for 73 points in 76 games, and another No. 1 overall pick, Nico Hischier (2017), also just 23, posted career bests across the board with 21 goals and 39 assists for 60 points in 70 games.

    Hughes for a full year is worth a few standings points, and assuming Fitzgerald uses the cash for a reliable goalie and a power-play quarterback, look for the Devils to leap a few spots in the Metropolitan Division, perhaps to as high as fifth.

5 of 7

    AP Photo/Nick Wass

    Let’s face it. The New York Islanders never had a chance last season.

    They started the year on a 13-game road trip while UBS Arena was being finished, and they were as ravaged by COVID-19 as any team in the league.

    They were 29th overall on December 31 before climbing incrementally by the end of each subsequent month and winding up 20th overall and fifth in the Metropolitan Division—16 points out of a playoff spot. They were seven points better than the Washington Capitals, the team that got that final berth, across the final four months of the season.

    So if they can avoid the roller-coaster dip in 2022-23, it’s easy to imagine them getting closer to where they’d been the previous two seasons—in the league’s playoff final four.

    GM Lou Lamoriello is an executive unafraid to make big moves to make things better, though the season-ending firing of Barry Trotz was a head-scratcher.

    Nevertheless, it remains an attractive job, and Trotz assistant Lane Lambert takes over in Long Island with a roster

This article was published at Bleacher Report. Read it in its entirety here. Read More

Categories
Colorado News

PEAK: Dems facing another federal complaint over shady Senate primary mailers

(Colorado Peak Politics)

The Democrats who decided it would be a good idea to drop hundreds of thousands on anonymous mailers to bail out Michael Bennet may find themselves with a mountain of legal headaches over the coming weeks and months.

Florida Senator and National Republican Senatorial Committee Chairman Rick Scott announced Monday national Republicans are filing a complaint with the Federal Election Commission against the yet to be determined group responsible for the mailers.

“Unfortunately, in their haste to meddle in the Republican primary, Democrats have clearly violated federal law and FEC rules,” Scott alleged.

The mail pieces promoting Senate candidate Ron Hanks completely lack any disclaimer showing who paid for the communication, and falsely claim that Hanks was “endorsed” by the Colorado Republican Party.

Because the anonymous group has not filed any reports with the Federal Election Commission, the NRSC’s complaint also alleges that the Democrats behind the mailer failed to disclose spending, vendors, and donors as prescribed by federal law.

So far a small union print insignia from a Democrat-affiliated Iowa mail firm is the only direct evidence linking the mailers to the left, but Sen. Scott pinned the blame squarely on Chuck Schumer.

“Chuck Schumer and the liberal special interests funding this clearly illegal campaign against Joe O’Dea have shown their hand. They know that Michael Bennet is vulnerable and is one of the weakest Democrat incumbents in the Senate,” Scott added.

 » Read More

Categories
Colorado News

PEAK: Ron Hanks declines to support Tina Peters for Secretary of State

(Colorado Peak Politics)

Republican U.S. Senate candidate Ron Hanks declined to offer support for Secretary of State candidate Tina Peters during a U.S. Senate primary forum on Monday.

The Senate primary debate is set to air Tuesday. The Colorado Sun has the summary portraying Hanks as being a little bit evasive on the subject when Shaun Boyd brought up the Secretary of State race.

Ron Hanks declines to support Tina Peters for Secretary of State #copolitics #cosen https://t.co/Wb8fMADm29 pic.twitter.com/X0a3jLFHx5

— CO Peak Politics (@COpeakpolitics) June 22, 2022

But Hanks declined to support indicted Mesa County Clerk Tina Peters, a Republican who is one of Colorado’s loudest supporters of conspiracies about the outcome of the last presidential election, in her bid to become Colorado’s next secretary of state. When asked if he is voting for Peters or one of her two primary opponents, Hanks said “at this point, I’ll leave that private.”

Is Hanks hesitancy in supporting Peters a signal of how her campaign is faring?

One has to wonder whether the mountain of indictments and legal problems are starting to hurt Peters with conservatives far more than the mainstream media will ever admit, seeing as how she has become their favorite whipping post.

The group Clean Elections Colorado is taking aim at Peters’ legal and ethical problems through a number of ads leading up to next week’s primary,

 » Read More

Categories
Colorado News

PAGE TWO: Armstrong: Colorado schools leaving many students behind

(Complete Colorado Page Two)

Do Coloradans’ mixed attitudes about public schools reflect school performance? In my recent column on public perception, I mentioned the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP). I figured that, to get a good sense of how Colorado schools are actually performing, results from that test are a good place to start.

What is the NAEP, you ask? According to the Department of Education, it “is the largest nationally representative and continuing assessment of what students in public and private schools in the United States know and are able to do in various subjects.”

To get a better sense of the particulars, if you go to the NAEP main page, you can pull up past test questions. If you like you can play your own game of “Are you smarter than a fourth grader?”

A sampling of questions

One question from fourth-grade math shows a to-scale image of five trees and asks “which tree’s height is about half of the height of” the first tree shown. This is an easy question; my second-grader got it right in under a minute. Surprisingly, though, in 2017, only 60% of tested fourth-graders nationally got this question right. The most-popular wrong answer was a tree twice the height of the first. I have to believe that the problem for the 40% of the students who missed it is simply that they could not read and understand the question.

Let’s try a twelfth-grade question.

 » Read More

Categories
Sports

Padres 3B Machado exits loss with sprained ankle

(ESPN)

Jun 19, 2022

  • ESPN News Services

DENVER — San Diego Padres star third baseman Manny Machado left Sunday’s 8-3 loss to the Colorado Rockies after injuring his left ankle while taking a tumble at first base trying to beat out an infield grounder.

Machado’s leg appeared to turn awkwardly while he was running to first base in the top of the first inning. He struggled to put weight on the ankle as he was helped off the field. Machado was later diagnosed with an ankle sprain after X-rays came back negative.

After the loss, there was cautious optimism in the team’s media availabilities regarding Machado’s status.

“Fortunately, when he felt himself slip, he was able to shift his weight to the right and probably avoid more serious damage,” Padres acting manager Ryan Flaherty said. “All in all, it’s as good as it could be.”

“We have to wait for some of the swelling to go down and he gets treated,” he added. “We’ll probably have a better idea of that (Monday).”

First baseman Eric Hosmer concurred, saying “just kind of talking to him and hearing the news from all the trainers and stuff, I think it’s a win, if that makes any sense.”

Machado stretched his left leg toward the base trying to beat the throw from pitcher Antonio Senzatela. Machado’s cleat appeared to slip across the top of the bag and he fell to the ground, his left leg buckling beneath him. The All-Star third baseman clearly was in pain, grimacing and clasping his hands around his lower left leg. Machado was out on the play, the throw beating him by a half-step.

Sergio Alcantara replaced Machado at third base when the Padres took the field in the bottom of the first inning at Coors

This article was published at ESPN. Read it in its entirety here. Read More

Categories
National Headlines

3,400-year-old city in Iraq emerges from underwater after extreme drought…

(CNN)A sprawling 3,400-year-old city emerged in Iraq after a reservoir’s water level swiftly dropped due to extreme drought.

Kurdish and German archaeologists excavated the settlement in the Mosul reservoir, along the Tigris River in the Kurdistan region of northern Iraq, in January and February. The project was in partnership with the Directorate of Antiquities and Heritage in Duhok to preserve the area’s cultural heritage for future generations.
The archaeological site, Kemune, is believed to be the Bronze Age city Zakhiku, a major hub of the Mittani Empire that reigned from 1550 to 1350 BC. The kingdom’s territory stretched from the Mediterranean Sea to northern Iraq, according to Ivana Puljiz, junior professor in the department of near eastern archaeology and assyriology at the University of Freiburg in Breisgau, Germany, and one of the directors of the project.

A race against time

Zakhiku was submerged underwater after the Iraqi government built the Mosul Dam in the 1980s and has rarely seen the light of day since then.
After Puljiz heard the city had reemerged, her team hurried to excavate the site because it was unknown when the water levels would rise again.
“Due to the enormous time pressure, we dug in freezing temperatures, snow, hail, rain, even storms, as well as the occasional sunny day, not knowing when the water would rise again and how much time we would have,” Puljiz said.
The ancient city is now resubmerged, but researchers were able to catalog much of the site.
A palace had already been documented when the city briefly emerged in 2018, but multiple additional structures were documented during the latest excavation. Some of the discoveries include a fortification complete with towers and walls and a storage building multiple stories tall.
Much of the structures were made of sun-dried mud bricks, which ordinarily would not hold up well underwater, researchers said. However, Zakhiku suffered from an earthquake around 1350 BC, and parts of the upper walls collapsed and covered the buildings.

Preserving the past

Little is known about the ancient Mittani people who built the city, largely due to the fact that researchers have not identified the empire’s capital or discovered their archives, Puljiz said. However, certain artifacts unearthed during the latest excavation could help provide insight.
Archaeologists found five ceramic vessels holding over 100 clay cuneiform tablets, dating back to closely after the earthquake event. They are believed to be from the Middle Assyrian period, which lasted from 1350 to 1100 BC, and could shed light on the city’s demise and the rise of Assyrian rule in the area, according to a news release.
“It is close to a miracle that cuneiform tablets made of unfired clay survived so many decades under water,” said Peter Pfälzner, professor of near eastern archaeology at University of Tübingen and one of the excavation directors, in a statement.
The tablets have not yet been deciphered, but Puljiz hypothesized they belonged to a private archive.
“I am curious next to see what the study of the cuneiform texts will reveal about the fate of the city and its in

Read More