AGENDA November 2025

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Indigenous co-management essential for Bears Ears region

Indigenous co-management essential for Bears Ears region

For the first time, a new study evaluated ecological legacies, archaeo-ecosystem restoration and Indigenous co-management practices in the Bears Ears region on the Colorado Plateau.
Acropolis Museum ready to welcome its visitors

Acropolis Museum ready to welcome its visitors

The AMNA visited the Acropolis Museum just before its reopening.
Climate change could erase ancient Indonesian cave art

Climate change could erase ancient Indonesian cave art

Griffith University-led research has revealed that some of the world’s earliest known rock art is disappearing at an alarming rate.
Mysterious stone structures in Saudi Arabia among oldest in the world

Mysterious stone structures in Saudi Arabia among oldest in the world

Αrchaeologists from the University of Western Australia in Perth claims that mysterious monumental stone structures called mustatils (which means rectangle in Arabic) located at the sites of AlUla and Khaybar (northwestern Saudi Arabia), may have been built for ritual purposes in the sixth millennium BC.
Production of marble slabs in the Roman imperial period

Production of marble slabs in the Roman imperial period

Analysis of wall decoration dating to the second century A.D. provides new insights into marble extraction and processing.
Genetic similarities between the first Bronze Age Aegean cultures

Genetic similarities between the first Bronze Age Aegean cultures

The Minoan civilization in Crete, the Helladic culture in mainland Greece and the Cycladic culture in the Aegean islands.
Rapa Nui communities offer insights for successful life in isolation

Rapa Nui communities offer insights for successful life in isolation

Binghamton University anthropologists Carl Lipo and Robert DiNapoli explore how complex community patterns in Rapa Nui — the indigenous name for both the island and its people — helped the isolated island survive from its settlement in the 12th to 13th century until European contact.
Fully-funded PhD opportunity on displaying ancient Egypt

Fully-funded PhD opportunity on displaying ancient Egypt

The University of Glasgow is inviting applications for a fully-funded PhD opportunity: an AHRC/SGSAH Collaborative Doctoral Award between National Museums Scotland and the University of Glasgow on displaying ancient Egypt in Scotland in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.
Ancestors may have created ‘iconic’ sounds as bridge to first languages

Ancestors may have created ‘iconic’ sounds as bridge to first languages

The ‘missing link’ that helped our ancestors to begin communicating with each other through language may have been iconic sounds, rather than charades-like gestures.
The museums are reopening on May 14

The museums are reopening on May 14

The safe opening of the museums marks an important step in the gradual reoperating of the country's cultural infrastructure.
Assistant Director at the IIHSA

Assistant Director at the IIHSA

The Irish Institute of Hellenic Studies at Athens is pleased to call for applications for the position of Assistant Director (part-time) to replace the current post holder.
Research reveals ancient people had more diverse gut microorganisms

Research reveals ancient people had more diverse gut microorganisms

An international team used human "paleofeces" to discover that ancient people had far different microorganisms living in their guts than we do in modern times.
Managing the Aqueduct of Constantinople

Managing the Aqueduct of Constantinople

Double water channels may have been used to maintain the system while enabling constant operation.
Fully-funded PhD studentship at the University of Bologna

Fully-funded PhD studentship at the University of Bologna

The Department of Classics and Italian studies of the University of Bologna invites applications for a fully-funded PhD studentship reserved for international students.
Triple international distinction for the new lighting of the Acropolis

Triple international distinction for the new lighting of the Acropolis

The new lighting of the Acropolis won three important awards at the 2020 International Darc Awards.
Amarna: A Guide To The Ancient City Of Akhetaten

Amarna: A Guide To The Ancient City Of Akhetaten

An illustrated cultural guide to the archaeological site of Amarna, the best-preserved pharaonic city in Egypt
The surprising evolutionary history of our oral bacteria

The surprising evolutionary history of our oral bacteria

Researchers reconstruct the oral microbiomes of Neanderthals, primates, and humans, including the oldest oral microbiome ever sequenced from a 100,000-year-old Neanderthal, and discover unexpected clues about human evolution and health.
Archaeologists pinpoint population for the Greater Angkor region

Archaeologists pinpoint population for the Greater Angkor region

Study designed at the University of Oregon provided a foundation that drew new information from lidar imagery, machine learning, archaeological and historical data.
PhD positions at the University of Freiburg

PhD positions at the University of Freiburg

The Research Training Group 2571 “Empires: Dynamic Change, Temporality and Post-Imperial Orders” funded by the German Research Council (DFG) invites applications for 4  three-year PhD Positions.
Current Research in Egyptology 2020/2021 taking place in Rhodes, Greece

Current Research in Egyptology 2020/2021 taking place in Rhodes, Greece

The latest CRE conference, organized by Aegean Egyptology at the University of the Aegean (Rhodes, Greece) has already started and it is running online.
Scrap for cash before coins

Scrap for cash before coins

Researchers including Göttingen University show Bronze Age witnessed revolution in small change across Europe.
Most human origins stories are not compatible with known fossils

Most human origins stories are not compatible with known fossils

Fossil apes can inform us about essential aspects of ape and human evolution, including the nature of our last common ancestor.
Dinosaurs that hunted in the dark

Dinosaurs that hunted in the dark

The tiny desert-living dinosaur Shuvuuia had extraordinary vision and owl-like hearing for nocturnal life in the Mongolian desert.
Conservation and restoration at the site of Kissonerga-Mosfilia

Conservation and restoration at the site of Kissonerga-Mosfilia

The reconstructed mudbrick prehistoric roundhouse serves as a Visitor centre at the important Chalcolithic archaeological site of Kissonerga-Mosfilia.
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