Researchers at Lund University in Sweden have used virtual reality and 3D eye-tracking technology to examine what drew the attention of the visitors when entering the stunning environment of an ancient Roman house. The team recreated the House of Greek Epigrams in 3D and tracked the gaze of study participants as they viewed the home.
A multidisciplinary research team of geneticists, archeologists and historians, including researchers from the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology in Leipzig, Germany, obtained and studied the first ancient genomes from the most important Avar elite sites discovered in contemporary Hungary
Giant mysterious jars that may have been used for burial rituals have been unearthed across four new sites in Assam, India
Toshiyuki Fujioka and Alfonso Benito-Calvo, researchers at the Centro Nacional de Investigación sobre la Evolución Humana (CENIEH), have recently published a paper in the Journal of Human Evolution with the results of burial dating using the cosmogenic nuclide isochron method, applied for the first time directly to the lithic industry of the Olduvai Gorge (Tanzania)
Neandertal populations in the Iberian Peninsula were experiencing local extinction and replacement even before Homo sapiens arrived, according to a study published March 30, 2022 in the open-access journal PLOS ONE by Joseba Rios-Garaizar of the Archaeological Museum of Bilbao, Spain and colleagues
Archaeologists have identified evidence of 2,000-year-old beer production at a site of a road improvement scheme
Study contradicts idea of massive movement of people or hostile invasion
Now a team of researchers from the MPI for the Science of Human History is looking for new ways to bring the “smellscapes” of the past back to life and using smell to study past experience, behavior, and society
Archaeologists have revealed that a funerary bundle excavated in the southern necropolis at the Mausoleum Temple of Huaca Las Ventanas, located in the Lambayeque region of Peru contains the remains of a person who served as a surgeon in the Sican Culture period
Previously undeveloped photos reveal 8,000-year-old signs of mummification — the earliest evidence found anywhere in the world
The symbols may represent a naming system
New study spotlights drought, rather than temperature or other reasons, as key to Norse disappearance