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by Archaeology Newsroom
How did humans and dogs become friends?
A new study is one step closer to an answer on how Indigenous people in the Americas interacted with early dogs and wolves.
News
05/12/2024
by Archaeology Newsroom
We might feel love in our fingertips –– but did the Ancient Mesopotamians?
Researchers studied ancient texts to see whether humans experience emotions in their bodies in a similar manner, regardless of time, language and culture.
News
05/12/2024
by Archaeology Newsroom
A Triceratops skull for the first time at auction
This remarkable specimen from the Late Cretaceous period (67 million years ago) has remained in the same collection since its discovery.
News
04/12/2024
by Archaeology Newsroom
Roman Villa of Sant Gregori specialized in viticulture
While no pressing rooms have been found so far, storage areas and additional spaces for work and living quarters have been uncovered.
News
04/12/2024
by Archaeology Newsroom
Caravaggio. The portrait unveiled
The painting had been kept for centuries in the Barberini family collection before ending up in a private collection.
News
03/12/2024
by Archaeology Newsroom
Incas used ceramics to maintain religious and political dominance
Rituals such as the capacocha are manifestations of Inca dominance, and ceramic vessels accompanying the rituals are symbols of imperialism.
News
03/12/2024
by Archaeology Newsroom
2000-year-old fig reveals Ireland’s ancient international food trade
The discovery of a 2000-year-old fig in North Dublin highlights Ireland’s long history of international food trade and taste for exotic foods.
News
03/12/2024
by Archaeology Newsroom
Early North Americans made needles from fur-bearers
Paleolithic humans made needles from the bones of foxes, hares, bobcats, mountain lions, lynx and possibly the now-extinct American cheetah.
News
02/12/2024
by Archaeology Newsroom
Utterly Indispensable: The Donkey in the Ancient World
This showcase exhibition at the Neues Museum of Berlin is dedicated to one of the first animals to be domesticated by humans: the donkey.
News
02/12/2024
by Archaeology Newsroom
Pompeii brought in a daily limit of admissions
'Experience has shown that only those who focus on quality can achieve sustainable growth', Gabriel Zuchtriegel said.
News
02/12/2024
by Archaeology Newsroom
Fossil dung reveals clues to dinosaur success story
Researchers at Uppsala University have been able to identify undigested food remains, plants and prey in the fossilised faeces of dinosaurs.
News
29/11/2024
by Archaeology Newsroom
Kuwaiti-Polish team discovers unique Ubaid figurine
This year's finds by Kuwaiti-Polish Archaeological Mission at Bahra 1, a prehistoric site in the Al-Subiyah desert of Northern Kuwait.
News
29/11/2024
by Archaeology Newsroom
Indigenous networks spread peaches across North America
Indigenous political and social networks and land use practices played key roles in the peach’s adoption and dispersal.
News
29/11/2024
by Archaeology Newsroom
Denmark’s Glyptotek returns Roman bronze portrait to Türkiye
Denmark's Glyptotek has decided in favour of Türkiye’s request to return the ancient bronze portrait of the Roman Emperor Septimius Severus.
News
28/11/2024
by Archaeology Newsroom
2024 excavation at Palaepaphos, Kouklia-Marchello site
A remarkable find from this year’s excavation season was a small, fragmentary inscription in the Cypriot syllabary, found in secondary use.
News
28/11/2024
by Archaeology Newsroom
First complex structure for tar extraction was made by Neanderthals
The discovery shows the extraction method Neanderthals developed and demonstrates the high level of their organization and cognition.
News
28/11/2024
by Archaeology Newsroom
Geronisos Island and Agios Georgios tis Pegeias excavations
The NYU team excavated two trenches at Maniki Harbor unearthing vast deposits late Roman amphorae dumped at the water’s edge.
News
28/11/2024
by Archaeology Newsroom
The Chilling Sound of the Aztec Death Whistle
A study conducted at the University of Zurich shows that these whistles have a disturbing effect on the human brain.
News
27/11/2024
by Archaeology Newsroom
Shut your Eyes and See
The Basil & Elise Goulandris Foundation in Athens unravels the different aspects of the work of international artist Nakis Panayotidis.
News
27/11/2024
by Archaeology Newsroom
Professor Lord Colin Renfrew (25th July 1937-24th Nov 2024)
Professor Cyprian Broodbank remembers Professor Lord Colin Renfrew, who passed away at the weekend aged 87.
News
26/11/2024
by Archaeology Newsroom
Tenth-century Viking sword fragment discovered in Frisian soil
The Fries Museum and the Fryske Akademy present a fragment of a 10th c. Viking sword that was discovered near the Frisian town of Witmarsum.
News
26/11/2024
by Archaeology Newsroom
Focaccia: a culinary tradition dating back 9,000 years ago
During the Late Neolithic, agricultural communities in the Fertile Crescent region of the Near East, developed a complex culinary tradition.
News
26/11/2024
by Archaeology Newsroom
Prehistoric hunter-gatherers heard the elks painted on rocks talking
The same vertical rock surfaces that have the painted elks, humans and boats, are also effective sound reflectors.
News
26/11/2024
by Archaeology Newsroom
Pyla-Koutsopetria Archaeological Project season completed
Excavations at the site have revealed the presence of an early-Hellenistic fortified site located on a steep plateau overlooking Larnaka Bay.
News
25/11/2024
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