Octopus lures from the Mariana Islands found to be oldest in the world; a study on World Archaeology suggests the ancient CHamoru people may have been the inventors
Monks Mound, the north ‘plaza’ in Cahokia was likely inundated year-round, as shown by a study published on the journal World Archaeology
New research demonstrates important connections between climate change and civil unrest among the ancient Maya
In search of Natounia: archaeological investigations offer up new findings on the history of Parthian settlements in Iraqi Kurdistan
Dr. Jeffrey Glover shares what he’s learned about the people from the Maya civilization who lived in Quintana Roo, Mexico, over a span of 3,000 years
Human bones were used for making pendants in the Stone Age, on the island of Yuzhniy Oleniy Ostrov on Lake Onega
Underwater jars reveal Roman period winemaking practices in coastal Italy; a new study has been published on PLOS One
Ancient DNA and teeth show: Romans brought mules with them; a new study has been published on the Journal of Archaeological Science
Arawakans indigenous communities used the Caribbean Sea as an aquatic highway; the study was published in the Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports
A ‘digital twin’ geographical atlas for the Appia Antica Archaeological Park, a vast, organic and systematic surveying and digitisation project