AGENDA November 2025

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Middle Stone Age populations repeatedly occupied West African coast

Middle Stone Age populations repeatedly occupied West African coast

Excavations at Tiémassas, Senegal, indicate roughly 40,000 years of behavioural continuity, in contrast to other African regions over this period.
Ancient Egyptian tomb yields material evidence for gynecological treatment

Ancient Egyptian tomb yields material evidence for gynecological treatment

An ancient Egyptian tomb of a noblewoman has yielded the first material evidence supporting the application of a certain gynecological treatment which was only known from medical papyri.  
Garstang Museum to support development of 3D digital exhibitions

Garstang Museum to support development of 3D digital exhibitions

The University of Liverpool’s Garstang Museum of Archaeology secured £40,000 investment from the Art Fund to produce digital exhibitions using 3D imagery.
43,750€ for a shoe belonging to Marie Antoinette

43,750€ for a shoe belonging to Marie Antoinette

Thanks to the "lively interest" shown by collectors, the price of the shoe far exceeded the initial estimate.
Prehistoric shark hid its largest teeth

Prehistoric shark hid its largest teeth

Some, if not all, early sharks that lived 300 to 400 million years ago not only dropped their lower jaws downward but rotated them outwards when opening their mouths.
Transition to feudal living in 14th c. impacted local ecosystems

Transition to feudal living in 14th c. impacted local ecosystems

The findings illustrate the direct and significant impact the economic transformation of Lagow from a tribal to a feudal society had on the local ecosystem.
Events at The Baron Thyssen Centre for the Study of Ancient Material Religion

Events at The Baron Thyssen Centre for the Study of Ancient Material Religion

The Baron Thyssen Centre for the Study of Ancient Material Religion (The Open University) has announced some upcoming events.
Dinosaurs were not in decline before asteroid hit

Dinosaurs were not in decline before asteroid hit

The researchers say that had the impact not happened, dinosaurs might have continued to dominate the Earth.
No drinking! No Fighting! The laws of early Edo Japan

No drinking! No Fighting! The laws of early Edo Japan

The official document details how workers should act during the reconstruction of Sunpu Castle.
Ancestral Puebloans survived from ice melt in New Mexico lava tubes

Ancestral Puebloans survived from ice melt in New Mexico lava tubes

A lava tube in the El Malpais National Monument yields centuries-old insights of survival in the face of harsh climate change.
The course of work at the National Gallery

The course of work at the National Gallery

The National Gallery’s Digital Programmes project is also in progress, with a budget of 2,200,000€.
Lost Worlds of Ancient and Modern Greece

Lost Worlds of Ancient and Modern Greece

The volume based on Gilbert Bagnani's personal letters and news’ reports covers the momentous years from 1921-1924.
Another 14 fossilized trees found on Lesvos

Another 14 fossilized trees found on Lesvos

The discovery was made during excavations for the construction of a drainage pipeline in the district of Akrochira.
X-ray imaging of a beetle’s world in ancient earthenware

X-ray imaging of a beetle’s world in ancient earthenware

Using X-rays, Professor Hiroki Obata of Kumamoto University, Japan has imaged 28 impressions of maize weevils on pottery shards from the late Jomon period.
KGB Espionage Museum Collection up for auction

KGB Espionage Museum Collection up for auction

The museum has been permanently closed and its entire collection will be auctioned on February 13, 2021 at Julien’s Auctions in Beverly Hills.
The Changing Landscapes of Rome’s Northern Hinterland

The Changing Landscapes of Rome’s Northern Hinterland

a new regional history of the middle Tiber valley as a lens through which to view the emergence and transformation of the city of Rome from 1000 BC to AD 1000.
More than 100 sarcophagi found in Saqqara

More than 100 sarcophagi found in Saqqara

The coffins are sealed and survive perfectly. The shafts also gave funerary masks and 40 wooden statues of Saqqara god Ptah Sokar.
Original pigments of inscriptions at the temple of Esna found

Original pigments of inscriptions at the temple of Esna found

More than 200 years after the rediscovery of an Egyptian temple, a German-Egyptian research team has uncovered the original colors of inscriptions that are around 2,000 years old.
Head of Hermes found in downtown Athens

Head of Hermes found in downtown Athens

Last Friday, a Hermes head came to light during sewage works opposite the Ag. Irini temple in Aiolou street of downtown Athens.
The world’s first industrial plant

The world’s first industrial plant

An elbow-shaped water flume as a special adaptation for the Barbegal mill complex and a symbol of the ingenuity of Roman engineers.
Nazi memorabilia stolen from museums

Nazi memorabilia stolen from museums

20 Nazi items were recently stolen from a museum in Denmark, including an SS uniform and the uniform of a Hitler Youth member.
Funding Call: British Academy Conferences

Funding Call: British Academy Conferences

The British Academy announces the call for proposals for British Academy Conferences to be held in 2022. 
Florisbad skull reinforces the Mosaic Hypothesis of Human Evolution

Florisbad skull reinforces the Mosaic Hypothesis of Human Evolution

The study describes the braincase traits of Florisbad, a fossil found in South Africa in 1932, and its similarities with other species like Homo sapiens, H. neanderthalensis and H. heidelbergensis.
First known case of TB in Britain came from Continental Europe

First known case of TB in Britain came from Continental Europe

A new study of the skeleton of an Iron Age man with the first known case of tuberculosis in Britain has shed new light on his origins.
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