A 1000-Year-Old Nordic Spearhead Raises the Question – Were The Vikings in New York?0
- Ancient Archeology, From Around the Web
- September 8, 2016
A 20th century find suggests that the Vikings may have explored North America as far south as New York.
A 20th century find suggests that the Vikings may have explored North America as far south as New York.
Circular foundations excavated on Rosemary Island date to the end of the last ice age – a time of ‘environmental stress’ for the Indigenous inhabitants
Who reached the Americas first? Some evidence believes that the first people in the Americas are called PaleoAmericans.
Mysterious 2,000-year-old stattuette of marble dolphin clutching a fish between its jaws has been discovered during archaeological excavations near Kibbutz Magen, bordering the Gaza Strip.
The 2,000-year-old stone block was likely cut to be used in a temple, but was abandoned because it was unsuitable for transporting.
A piece of wood recovered at a dig near the Great Pyramid of Giza shows for the first time that ancient Egyptians used metal in their boats, archaeologists said Wednesday.
Some geologists believe we’ve entered a new era. Now they have to search for the rocks that prove it.
The Tarim mummies, discovered at the foothills of the Tian Shan Mountains in Xinjiang, China. Though their origins might be of another place in the world.
New techniques for identifying the tools of sacrifice sharpen our understanding of the ritual
Early settlers built a church on top of a hill not knowing that the Great Pyramid of Cholulu lay beneath