Building for Egypt’s First Female Pharaoh Discovered0
- Ancient Archeology, From Around the Web
- April 24, 2016
Researchers have discovered the remains of the building dedicated to Egypt’s first female pharaoh.
Researchers have discovered the remains of the building dedicated to Egypt’s first female pharaoh.
Television news is dying and is burning itself out.
In an ancient city of Philadelphia, there has been the discovery of the remains of a health center with a tools and a morgue.
Apatoraptor pennatus likely displayed its feathers to impress potential mates
Long-snouted crocodylians in South America, India evolved separately to adopt river-dwelling lifestyle, protruding eyes
These puzzling holes in the arid valleys of southern Peru tell us there was once a flourishing, sophisticated society here.
The ancient crown dates back to the Copper Age between 4000–3500 BC, and is just one out of more than 400 artifacts that were recovered in a cave in the Judean Desert near the Dead Sea.
Was it an asteroid or something inside that wiped the dinosaur off the face of the earth?
Pottery shards unearthed at a seventh century, B.C. fort in the desert in Israel may reveal when parts of the Bible were written.
A prominent scholar and historian of Second Temple period Judaism revisits the tantalizing issues surrounding the almost forgotten “Abba Cave” tomb in Jerusalem.