Microscopic study of milk teeth reveals mystery of death of Iberian culture newborns buried inside homes; the study in the Journal of Archaeological Science
A new way of looking at tooth enamel could give scientists a path to deeper understanding of the health of human populations, from the ancient to the modern
A study, published in the Journal of Archaeological Science, reveals how X-Ray MicroCT can reconstruct the processes behind Middle Bronze Age Cretan ceramics
Archaeologists put on their lab coats analyzed pottery from Neolithic sites to illuminate ancient culinary practices
Researchers found microscopic gaps between bone layers in living anemia patients subjects which matched patterns in archaeological remains
Researchers from Tokyo Metropolitan University crafted replica stone age tools and used them for a range of tasks to see how different activities create traces on the edge
Hundreds of human remains at the Crenshaw site are not foreign enemies, as previous researchers hypothesized, but locals, ancestors from Caddo
Cyprus’s copper deposits created one of the most important trade hubs in the Bronze Age in the village of Hala Sultan Tekke
The colors on these ancient pots hint at the power of the Wari empire: the same rich black pigment is found in ceramics used in rituals
Steel Was Already Used in Europe 2900 Years Ago, during the Final Bronze Age, according to a study published in the Journal of Archaeological Science