Dabbs of Southern Illinois University and Anna Stevens of Monash University reviewed the archaeological and bioarchaeological ...
Imagine Europe tens of thousands of years ago: dense forests, large herds of elephants, bison and aurochs—and small groups of ...
ZME Science on MSN
Vikings really did reach North America a thousand years ago — and now we know exactly when
Overall, the study tells us that by 1021 CE, the Vikings were already in North America. They could have been there earlier, ...
A study of Persia’s Royal Highway uncovers how the Achaemenids built roads to support the empire's royal machinery across ...
The carbon-14 analysis produced striking results that challenge conventional wisdom about Bronze Age chronology. When comparing uncalibrated radiocarbon dates from the Egyptian artifacts with robust ...
A new study reveals that the deadliest weapon of the Bronze Age originated in the Near East around 1600 BCE before spreading ...
Griffith researchers built and tested a digital archaeology framework to learn more about the ancient humans who created one ...
An exhibition in Kent is exploring the ethics behind the archaeological excavation of human remains. The event, held by ...
History With Kayleigh Official on MSN
5 Discoveries That Changed Archaeology in 2021
From the rediscovery of the “Lost Golden City” in Egypt to North America’s oldest footprints, 2021 reshaped our understanding ...
Live Science on MSN
What if Christopher Columbus had never reached the Americas?
Columbus wasn't the first European to reach the Western Hemisphere; the Vikings had landed in Newfoundland about 500 years ...
The plague theory emerged primarily from ancient texts rather than physical evidence. Hittite plague prayers from the late 14th century BC describe a devastating epidemic that allegedly originated ...
Sixth graders at Berkshire Arts and Technology Charter School turned their classroom into an archaeological lab, ...
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