Vikings in paradise: Were the Norse the first to settle the Azores? (Science 04/10/21)
Seafarers may have come and gone from lush archipelago more than 1000 years ago
Seafarers may have come and gone from lush archipelago more than 1000 years ago
Archaeologists conducting excavations in a prehistoric settlement in Ebreichsdorf, Austria, have discovered a golden sun bowl dating from 3,000 years ago
A new study sheds light on the origin and legacy of the enigmatic Etruscans with genome-wide data from 82 ancient individuals from central and southern Italy, spanning 800 BCE to 1000 CE
Archaeologists conducting research in the White Sands National Park in New Mexico has identified the oldest known human footprints in the Americas
Perforated shells may have signaled identity, attracted mates
Easter Island’s famous megaliths have relatives on islands thousands of miles to the north and west—and so did the people who created them, a study said Wednesday
Akira Ichikawa, an archaeologist at the University of Colorado Boulder, has found evidence of Mayans returning to a part of Central America that was destroyed after a catastrophic volcanic eruption, much sooner than previously thought
A project led by the University of Bradford, involving 15 universities and 63 heritage collections, will bring the prehistoric landscape of Doggerland back to life using advanced mapping techniques
They help confirm a long-standing theory about the genetic origins of modern-day Japanese populations
A tomb embedded in the rock by the main entrance to the San Tirso and San Bernabé Hermitage situated in the karst complex of Ojo Guareña (Burgos) was excavated; its structure of slabs holds the skeleton of an adult individual in the supine position, with its head to the west, set between two small limestone…
The oldest example of immobile art consisting of carefully placed immortalised hand and footprints has been discovered in Tibet
Archaeologists excavating a tomb embedded in the rock by the main entrance to the San Tirso and San Bernabé Hermitage in the karst complex of Ojo Guareña (Merindad de Sotoscueva, Burgos) have discovered the skeleton of an adult individual in the supine position, with its head to the west set between two small limestone blocks