Mystery of the ancient Nazca spiral holes may be solved0
- Ancient Archeology, From Around the Web
- December 9, 2016
Researchers have figured out the purpose behind the unique corkscrew puquios.
Researchers have figured out the purpose behind the unique corkscrew puquios.
In the city of Cholula in central Mexico there stands a hill with a giant church on top which hides a manmade pyramid filled with secrets.
Today, the city of Samarkand in Uzbekistan is relatively remote, known mostly for its magnificent medieval ruins. But over a millennium ago, it was one of the richest cities on the infamous trade route known as the Silk Road. Back in the 600s CE, that route was called simply “the road to Samarkand.”
The Royal Library of Ashurbanipal has sometimes been described as the ‘first library’ in the world, or the ‘oldest surviving royal library in the world’.
The tomb of an Iron Age Celtic prince has been unearthed in a small French town.
Mississippi floods shaped the rise and fall of the prehistoric metropolis known as Cahokia.
Somewhere between Earth’s creation and where we are today, scientists have demonstrated that some early life forms existed just fine without any oxygen. While researchers proclaim the first half of our 4.5 billion-year-old planet’s life as an important time for the development and evolution of early bacteria, evidence for these life forms remains sparse including
Thousands of inscriptions and petroglyphs dating back around 2,000 years have been discovered in the Jebel Qurma region of Jordan’s Black Desert. They tell of a time when the now-desolate landscape was teeming with life.
The Serapeum of Saqqara are ancient ‘boxes’ that have perfect precision. How are they so perfect?
Numerous maps have been discovered depicting our planet as it was before the last ice age. Many people claim that before written history, extremely advanced ancient civilizations existed on Earth and these ancient cultures, ignored by mainstream history, had well-developed cartography systems comparable in precision to the one’s we have today.