The results from Politiko-Troullia open an archaeological window on the farming and mining communities that provided the foundation for urbanized civilization on Cyprus.
Global criminal trafficking network for ancient art revealed in the first ever empirical study on the matter by researchers at the University of Glasgow.
A major British Museum exhibition examining the Greek body next spring is expected to stir up feelings on the most famous and bitterly contested Greek sculptures in the world.
An 11th Dynasty Egyptian chapel was found at the Arabet Abydos area in Sohag by an excavation mission from the Ministry of Antiquities and Heritage (MAH).
Changes in skin’s barrier set Northern Europeans apart, a new study suggests questioning the role of skin pigment in enabling survival at higher latitudes.
The 2014 field season at the Late Bronze Age city at the site of Dromolaxia-Vizatzia (Hala Sultan Tekke) has been completed. The site lies close to Larnaca International Airport and the famous mosque with the same name.
The results of 3D modelling of China's Terracotta Army, undertaken by UCL Institute of Archaeology and international colleagues, have recently been published in the Journal of Archaeological Science.
Looted Egyptian artefacts were recovered by the Tourism and Antiquities Police after the members of a gang specialising in illegal excavation work and the looting of antiquities have been caught.
Washington State University researchers have sketched out one of the greatest baby booms in North American history, a centuries-long “growth blip” among southwestern Native Americans between 500 and 1300 A.D.
Neanderthals in Europe cooked and ate plants some 50,000 years ago, according to an analysis of fossilized fecal material recovered at the Neanderthal occupation site El Salt in southern Spain.
Modern technology—from X-rays to Photoshop—is not restricted to “CSI”-style crime labs. This exhibition offers a behind-the-scenes perspective on the intersection of art and science taking place in the museum every day.
The Museum of Fine Arts, Boston (MFA), has reached an agreement with the National Commission of Museums and Monuments, Nigeria (NCMM), transferring to the Commission eight antiquities of Nigerian origin that are believed to have been the subject of illicit trafficking.
An ancient burial containing chariots, gold artifacts and possible human sacrifices has been unearthed by archaeologists in the country of Georgia, in South Caucasus.