Burden Mounts for Caretaker Relatives, Who Say State Does Little to Help

WASHINGTON – Joyce Edwards came home to her small Edgewater apartment after a day managing the operations of an Anne Arundel County post office, cooked herself an early supper and was ready to retire for the day

Hobbyists with Metal Detectors Say They Don’t Deserve Tarnished Image

WASHINGTON – Bill Long of the Maryland Research and Recovery Society recognizes that some archeologists have a “disdain” for metal detector enthusiasts like him

Indian Relics Languish in Museums as Maryland Tribes Fight for Recognition

ANNAPOLIS – A decision may be near on the final resting place for the partial remains of about 500 Maryland Piscataway Indians held for more than 50 years by the Maryland Historical Trust and the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History

Stop-and-Go Archeology Funding Frustrates Researchers, Scatters Artifacts

WASHINGTON – The Addison family has a rich history in Maryland, dating back to the 17th century

Fight to Save Historic and Prehistoric Sites is Fight for State’s “Soul”

WASHINGTON – The map itself looked like it had only been dug up a few days earlier

Fast Action Often Called for in Slow-Paced Archeology World to Save History

LEONARDTOWN – Winds gusted forcefully as the first winter storm of the season rapidly approached the Eastern Shore from the south

Thousands of Miles of Shoreline Pose Threat, Opportunity for Archeologists

WASHINGTON – Budweiser cans and 10,000-year-old artifacts are unlikely companions

Federal Rule May Sober Opponents of Lower Drunken Driving Limit

ANNAPOLIS – A federal mandate to lower the drunken-driving limit to a blood-alcohol level of