By analyzing DNA with the help of AI, an international research team has developed a method for dating archeological remains
Analysis of everyday tools suggests a more complex picture and continuity after the Mycenean invasion in Crete
Shattered glass of Beirut: British Museum to display newly conserved ancient glass vessels damaged in 2020 Beirut port explosion
The Augustinian friars of medieval Cambridge appear to have been riddled with parasites, according to a new research
New research shows Louisiana State University campus mounds as the oldest known man-made structures in North America
Chicken bones and snail shells helped archaeologists to date more precisely the destruction of the Greek town Tell Iẓṭabba
Boomerangs were used to shape the edges of stone tools used by Australian Indigenous communities; a new study finds
A new inscription with a petition for intercession by Apostle Peter has been discovered at the suggested Biblical town of Bethsaida
Rock crystals were moved over long distances by Early Neolithic Brits and were used to mark their burial sites
Augmented reality could be the future of paper books, according to a new research published in IEEE Pervasive Computing
New Mexico mammoths among best evidence for early humans in North America; a new study was published in Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution
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
Oldest DNA from domesticated American horse lends credence to shipwreck folklore; the study has been published on PLoS One
Prehistoric roots of ‘cold sore’ virus traced through ancient herpes DNA; a study has been published on Science Advances
High-status Danish Vikings wore exotic beaver furs; identified by ancient proteins, fur was important as a trade and status item
Monks Mound, the north ‘plaza’ in Cahokia was likely inundated year-round, as shown by a study published on the journal World Archaeology
A new book by Bruce Edelstein: Eleonora di Toledo and the Creation of Boboli Gardens, dedicated to the Florentine duchess 500 years after her birth
New research demonstrates important connections between climate change and civil unrest among the ancient Maya
When did the genetic variations that make us human emerge? A new study on the subject was published on Scientific Reports
In search of Natounia: archaeological investigations offer up new findings on the history of Parthian settlements in Iraqi Kurdistan