Researchers have discovered the earliest-known evidence of freshwater fishing by ancient people of the Americas in Interior Alaska
The exhibition Sovereign Metals. Festivities, the Hunt and the Firmament in Medieval Islam, is held at the MAO Museo d’Arte Orientale
University of Tübingen computational linguist investigates kinships of the Tupí-Guaraní language family using methods from molecular biology
Hundreds of human remains at the Crenshaw site are not foreign enemies, as previous researchers hypothesized, but locals, ancestors from Caddo
Javier S. Burgo has discovered the third portrait of the Les Monomanes series by the master of French Romanticism Théodore Géricault
Researchers has discovered evidence of a human presence at Tam Pà Ling, in mainland Southeast Asia, between 86,000 and 68,000 years ago
Genomics and archaeology rewrite the Neolithic Revolution in the Maghreb, according to a new study published in Nature
Evidence of ancient breeding of scarlet macaws in today’s New Mexico in the 1100s, according to a study in PNAS Nexus
Norway, 1940: the parliament (Stortinget) was willing to sacrifice King and government; a book by Historian Øystein Sørensen has been trying to understand why
The first prehistoric wind instruments (known as flutes) in the Levant have been found at the site of Eynan-Mallaha in northern Israel
Medieval music wasn’t necessarily supposed to be something beautiful and complex, it had other practical purposes,” says Manon Louviot, a musicologist
A team from Goethe University Frankfurt was searching for charcoal and found 4,300-year-old copper ingots, during a routine excavation in Oman
An Archaeology project is to examine fortress community resilience in the transition from the Bronze to Iron Age at Dmanisis Gora, in southern Georgia
The analysis of silver bracelets found in the tomb of queen Hetepheres I reveals ancient trade networks involving Greece and Lebanon
4,000-year-old plague DNA found: the oldest cases to date in Britain; the paper is published in Nature Communications
Shell beads at the Kaylu rock shelter, provide new insights into seafaring, showing the routes of cultural transmission in the Caspian Sea region
Archaeologists identify Moluccan boats that may have visited Australia from Indonesia on NT rock art drawings
Early toilets reveal dysentery from Giardia duodenalis in Old Testament Jerusalem, at the times of the biblical Kingdom of Judah
Despite the dangers, early humans risked life-threatening flintknapping injuries, according to a new study published in American Antiquity
Non-binary gender in prehistoric Europe: the methods currently available leave a lot of room for error, according to a new study in the Cambridge Archaeological Journal