Researchers estimate that early humans began smoking meat to extend its shelf life as long as a million years ago
Diversity Statistics of Onomastic Data Reveal Social Patterns in Hebrew Kingdoms of the Iron Age; a new study published in PNAS
The ancient copper industry in King Solomon’s mines, located in the Timna Valley, did not pollute the environment
400,000-year-old stone tools designed specifically for butchering fallow deer, following the disappearance of elephants
The reason for the proximity between Paleolithic extensive stone quarries and water sources: Elephant hunting by early humans
Measuring the magnetic field recorded in burnt bricks corroborates the conquest of the Philistine city of Gath by King Hazael of Aram-Damascus, as recorded by the Book of Kings 2
The need to hunt small prey compelled prehistoric humans to produce appropriate hunting weapons and improve their cognitive abilities
Early humans in the Hula Valley invested in systematic procurement of raw materials hundreds of thousands of years ago
Early toilets reveal dysentery from Giardia duodenalis in Old Testament Jerusalem, at the times of the biblical Kingdom of Judah
Research into grape pips found from the excavated Byzantine monastery of Avdat (Oboda), in the Negev Highlands (Israel), hints at the origins of the Gaza wine