Archaeologists working at the animal cemetery at Berenike have documented remains from three dozen primates, marking a significant shift in Roman pet-keeping practices. Previously, the handful of ...
Beginning sometime between the sixth and fourth centuries B.C. and continuing up until the late twentieth century A.D., members of rural communities sporadically worked the Chehrabad salt mine in ...
The Current Archaeology Awards celebrate the projects and publications that made the pages of the magazine over the past 12 months, and the people judged to have made outstanding contributions to ...
Archaeologists uncover 16 Indigenous canoes, one older than the Pyramids, revealing a vast prehistoric travel network.
An unusual painted sculpture of a woman covered in jewels and seated on a throne dating to the fourth century B.C. was unearthed in a tomb in the southern Spanish city of Baza in 1971. As soon as it ...
From “experimental archaeology” to the mysterious appeal of exploration, the wide-ranging subjects detailed in these titles captivated Smithsonian magazine’s science contributors this year ...
New research from the University of St Andrews, as part of a team led by the University of Bradford, has confirmed the ...
Researchers have uncovered extensive pre-Hispanic settlements hidden beneath the waters and vegetation of Bolivia's Great Tectonic Lakes. Using advanced LiDAR technology and collaborative fieldwork ...
Pompeii’s shattered wall paintings rise again, thanks to robotics and AI. The final touch still belongs to human restorers.
The Melsonby Hoard has been nominated for a national award by one of the UK’s leading archaeological publications. The hoard, ...
Experts are continuing to investigate a ring of 20 Stonehenge pits that may mark Britain's largest Neolithic structure.
"I use clay as one uses a diary: to record the feelings of daily life and the things that surround me," Chastagner tells ...