Why Ancient Brits threw out their most prized possessions0
- Ancient Archeology, From Around the Web
- May 12, 2016
Hundreds of objects that seem far too important to dump have been found in Britain, dating from the Bronze Age
Hundreds of objects that seem far too important to dump have been found in Britain, dating from the Bronze Age
Archaeologists are using bones unearthed from the 2,000-year-old tomb of Haihunhou, the Marquis of Haihun, to conduct DNA analysis.
A previously unknown subterranean structure, either a souterrain or a ‘well’ dating from the Iron Age has been unearthed near the manse of Harray in West Mainland, Orkney.
A crocodile-sized creature that lived 242 million years ago was the first known vegetarian marine reptile, according to new fossil evidence.
A new Nazca geoglyph found in Peru has been uncovered, and it ranges almost 100 feet long.
Long before modern countries like China and Dubai began making artificial islands, the Calusa people built a kingdom on seashells.
Scientists across the board have been blown away by Gadoury’s discovery.
Geophysicists announced this week that they have successfully collected key samples from the site of the asteroid strike that likely wiped out the dinosaurs.
Remarkable DNA map which shows how modern Britons still live in the same tribal kingdom areas as their ancestors in 600 AD.
“the average intensity of the [geomagnetic] field within the circle was significantly lower than that measured outside, as if the stones acted as a shield.”