Coastal heritage is globally threatened by climate change, according to a new study published in PNAS Nexus
Ancient Roman borders, such as the Limes wall, still shape well-being and personality today and have psychological and economic effects, according to a new study published in Current Research in Ecological and Social Psychology
Bad weather led the Zuytdorp, a Dutch ship, into Western Australian coast; it was likely due to a storm and not bad navigation
Peaches spread across North America through Indigenous political and social networks and thanks to land use practices
Beneath the Brushstrokes, van Gogh’s Sky in the painting “The Starry Night” is Alive with Real-World Physics; a new study in Physics of Fluids
Painkiller or Pleasure? A team of archaeologists provides the first conclusive evidence for the intentional use of black henbane in the Roman world
The Danish colonisation of Greenland in the 18th century was in part driven by the desire to re-establish contact with early Norse settlers that vanished from the island in the course of the 15th century
The first Dutch exhibition about mummy portraits aka Fayum portraits opens at the Allard Pierson in October
Medieval music wasn’t necessarily supposed to be something beautiful and complex, it had other practical purposes,” says Manon Louviot, a musicologist
Archaeologists identify Moluccan boats that may have visited Australia from Indonesia on NT rock art drawings