AGENDA November 2025

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New evidence found of the ritual significance of a Classic Maya sweat bath

New evidence found of the ritual significance of a Classic Maya sweat bath

At the site of Xultun, Guatemala, a Maya sweat bath led to new evidence of these beliefs and an early example of the related rituals.
New work by Banksy in Nottingham

New work by Banksy in Nottingham

Shows a young girl using a bicycle tyre as a hula-hoop.
Oldest securely dated evidence for a river flowing through the Thar Desert

Oldest securely dated evidence for a river flowing through the Thar Desert

Using luminescence dating of ancient river sediments, a new study presents evidence for river activity at Nal Quarry in the central Thar Desert starting from approximately 173 thousand years ago.
Scientists find medieval plague outbreaks picked up speed over 300 years

Scientists find medieval plague outbreaks picked up speed over 300 years

The disease spread four times faster in the 17th century than it had in the 14th century.
Rheneia, the other Delos

Rheneia, the other Delos

120 years after the first excavations, the Cyclades Ephorate of Antiquities, with the means offered by modern technology, returns to Rheneia.
Hittite cuneiform scripts will soon be accessible online

Hittite cuneiform scripts will soon be accessible online

The collection will be based on around 30,000 documents, most of which are written in the Hittite language.
World’s greatest mass extinction triggered switch to warm-bloodedness

World’s greatest mass extinction triggered switch to warm-bloodedness

The ancestors of both mammals and birds became warm-blooded at the same time, some 250 million years ago, in the time when life was recovering from the greatest mass extinction of all time.
New dating results for two Lower Palaeolithic sites in France

New dating results for two Lower Palaeolithic sites in France

Researchers used an unprecedented combination of three different dating techniques to date the two Lower Palaeolithic sites in France.
Machu Picchu opened for a single tourist

Machu Picchu opened for a single tourist

The Japanese tourist had to wait almost seven months to enter the ancient Inca city after being trapped in the Andean country during the coronavirus pandemic.
Medieval town discovered in Bulgaria

Medieval town discovered in Bulgaria

Surprising discovery: a completely unknown medieval town described as the third satellite town of the city of Pliska, the capital of the First Bulgarian Empire between 680 and 893 AD.
When good governments go bad

When good governments go bad

History shows that societies collapse when leaders undermine social contracts.
Influences from Gandhara & Interior of Africa in ancient temple

Influences from Gandhara & Interior of Africa in ancient temple

In a temple in the port of Berenice Troglodytica stone heads imitating sculptures from Gandhara and the depths of Africa were found.
Modern humans took detours on their way to Europe

Modern humans took detours on their way to Europe

Favourable climatic conditions influenced the sequence of settlement movements of Homo sapiens in the Levant on their way from Africa to Europe.
A ‘patriotic sword’ used during the January Uprising of 1863-1864

A ‘patriotic sword’ used during the January Uprising of 1863-1864

The sword, engraved with the words “Vivat Szlachcic Pan i fundator wojska” (Long live the Noble Lord and founder of the army), was discovered near Veliko Tarnovo.
The palace where Alexander the Great was born comes to light

The palace where Alexander the Great was born comes to light

By next summer, it is expected that the palace where Alexander the Great was born in then coastal city of Pella will be able to receive visitors.
Ice Age footprints found in White Sands National Park

Ice Age footprints found in White Sands National Park

Footprints show a female walking for almost a mile, with a toddler’s footprints occasionally showing up beside hers.
First mammals lived more like reptiles

First mammals lived more like reptiles

Pioneering analysis of 200 million-year-old teeth belonging to the earliest mammals suggests they functioned like their cold-blooded counterparts—reptiles, leading less active but much longer lives.
Storage jars in Israel: If the glove fits

Storage jars in Israel: If the glove fits

Modern tools and US Army-edition gloves may have uncovered the original dimensions of the tefach, a biblical unit of measurement used by ancient Israelites.
Who lived in the Theopetra Cave?

Who lived in the Theopetra Cave?

The 43 people who lived in the Theopetra Cave during the Neolithic period, had a diet of wheat, barley, olives, pulses and a little meat.
A History of World Egyptology

A History of World Egyptology

A History of World Egyptology is a ground-breaking reference work that traces the study of ancient Egypt.
MA and PhD in Classics, University of Florida

MA and PhD in Classics, University of Florida

The Department of Classics at the University of Florida invites applications for its MA and Ph.D. programs.
Central Asian horse riders played ball games 3,000 years ago

Central Asian horse riders played ball games 3,000 years ago

Researchers examined balls about five centuries older than the previously known ancient balls and depictions of ball games in Eurasia.
The Royal Opera House, London is auctioning a David Hockney painting

The Royal Opera House, London is auctioning a David Hockney painting

According to the Observer, the painting will be auctioned by Christie’s this month and its price is estimated to be between 11 to 18 million pounds sterling.
Past tropical forest changes drove megafauna and hominin extinctions

Past tropical forest changes drove megafauna and hominin extinctions

Scientists found that the loss of these grasslands was instrumental in the extinction of many of the region's megafauna, and probably of ancient humans too.
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