Painkiller or Pleasure? A team of archaeologists provides the first conclusive evidence for the intentional use of black henbane in the Roman world
‘A ticking clock’: First ground-based survey of damage to Ukrainian cultural sites reveals severity, need for urgency
An elegantly carved saddle from Mongolia is one of earliest frame saddles; the study has been published in the Antiquity journal
Oldest fortresses in the world discovered at Amnya, in a remote region of Siberia; the study has been published in Antiquity
‘Bone biographies’ reveal life and times of medieval England’s common people: the hard-knock lives of those who lived in Cambridge
Cold War satellite imagery reveals 396 previously undocumented Roman forts in Mesopotamia, from western Syria to northwestern Iraq
Archaelogists revael the largest palaeolithic cave art site at Cova (or Cueva) Dones, in Eastern Iberia; the study is published on Antiquity
In a new study, published in the Journal Antiquity, the “Stonehenge calendar” is shown to be a modern construct
Thirsty wheat needed new water management strategy in ancient China, according to a study published in the journal Antiquity
Chicken bones and snail shells helped archaeologists to date more precisely the destruction of the Greek town Tell Iẓṭabba