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Archaeologists Unearthed 483 Ancient Settlements That Could Be Pieces of a Lost Civilization
The discovery of the settlements over the years has led to a new understanding of the Asia Minor and Anatolia regions.
ZME Science on MSN
In a Remote Egyptian Port, Roman Officers May Have Proven Their Status by Owning Exotic Monkeys From India
Berenike was an isolated, windswept outpost. It linked the Roman Empire to the trade routes of India, Arabia, and East Africa ...
Live Science on MSN
'It is the most exciting discovery in my 40-year career': Archaeologists uncover evidence that Neanderthals made fire 400,000 years ago in England
Archaeologists have found the earliest evidence yet of fire technology — and it was created by Neanderthals in England more ...
The oldest evidence for human ancestors using fire, dating back to between 1 million and 1.5 million years ago, comes from a ...
The Taş Tepeler region of archaeological sites in Türkiye has yielded more artifacts that were possibly associated with ...
Clues from a digital reconstruction of a lavish ancient home are changing how researchers understand Pompeii’s elite.
A group of scientists are studying the Cyclades, an island group in Greece's Aegean Sea, looking for signs of early human ...
Live Science on MSN
'We do not know of a similar case': 4,000-year-old burial in little-known African kingdom mystifies archaeologists
An isolated burial in Sudan has revealed the first evidence of an unknown funeral ritual that took place nearly 4,000 years ago in a little-known African kingdom, a new study finds. In the grave, ...
Archaeological evidence from sites like Madjedbebe suggested an arrival date of approximately 65,000 years ago, while genetic analyses consistently pointed to a much more recent timeframe of 47,000 to ...
The operation saw nine people placed in pre-trial detention and 14 under house arrest in Sicily alone. Charges levied against ...
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The Glozel affair: A sensational archaeological hoax made science front-page news in 1920s France
In early November 1927, the front pages of newspapers all over France featured photographs not of the usual politicians, aviators or sporting events, but of a group of archaeologists engaged in ...
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