AGENDA January 2026

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Online guided tour of the exhibition on Nikola Tesla

Online guided tour of the exhibition on Nikola Tesla

“Electrify yourselves”, experiment, play and discover the limits of the vision and genius of one of the most iconic personalities in history.
New findings in Oxyrhynchus archaeological site

New findings in Oxyrhynchus archaeological site

Researchers conducted anthropological studies of the buried deceased and consolidation and restoration tasks on wall paintings and different objects that were recovered during the excavation.
Our direct human ancestor Homo erectus is older than we thought

Our direct human ancestor Homo erectus is older than we thought

An unusual skullcap and thousands of clues have created a southern twist to the story of human ancestors, in research published in Science on 3 April.
Modern humans, Neanderthals share a tangled genetic history

Modern humans, Neanderthals share a tangled genetic history

New research adds to growing evidence that our ancestors interbred with Neanderthals at multiple times in history.
Europe’s 7 Most Endangered heritage sites 2020

Europe’s 7 Most Endangered heritage sites 2020

The 7 Most Endangered programme is run by Europa Nostra in partnership with the European Investment Bank Institute.
BSA Visiting Fellowship 2020-2021

BSA Visiting Fellowship 2020-2021

Applications are invited for a Visiting Fellowship at the British School at Athens for 2-3 months in the academic year 2020-21 in any branch of the arts or sciences related to Greece.
Call for postdoc: “Archive Archaeology”

Call for postdoc: “Archive Archaeology”

The research project "Archive Archaeology: Preserving and Sharing Palmyra’s Cultural Heritage through Harald Ingholt’s Digital Archives" is looking to recruit a full-time (37 hours/week) postdoctoral fellow with the possibility of a one-year extension.
Free access to 1.4 million books

Free access to 1.4 million books

The organization The Internet Archive went ahead with offering free online access to all 1.4 million books of its lending library.
Evidence for a 90-million-year-old rainforest near the South Pole

Evidence for a 90-million-year-old rainforest near the South Pole

Researchers have found unexpected fossil traces of a temperate rainforest near the South Pole 90 million years ago, suggesting the continent had an exceptionally warm climate in prehistoric times.
Oldest ever human genetic evidence clarifies dispute over our ancestors

Oldest ever human genetic evidence clarifies dispute over our ancestors

Genetic information from an 800,000-year-old human fossil has been retrieved for the first time.
Teaching Fellow in Roman History

Teaching Fellow in Roman History

The Department of Classics, Ancient History and Archaeology of the University of Birmingham is looking to appoint a teaching fellow for 12 months starting 1 September 2020.
ARCE’s 2020 Virtual Meeting

ARCE’s 2020 Virtual Meeting

For the first time ever, the American Research Center in Egypt (ARCE) will host its Annual Meeting virtually.
Lucy had an ape-like brain

Lucy had an ape-like brain

Three-million-year-old brain imprints show that Australopithecus afarensis infants may have had a long dependence on caregivers.
Homo naledi juvenile remains offers clues to how our ancestors grew up

Homo naledi juvenile remains offers clues to how our ancestors grew up

A partial skeleton of Homo naledi represents a rare case of an immature individual, shedding light on the evolution of growth and development in human ancestry.
Discovery of 8-foot mammoth tusk in Bavaria

Discovery of 8-foot mammoth tusk in Bavaria

Archaeologists working in the Bavarian town of Riekofen have discovered a large mammoth tusk whilst carrying excavations works looking for the remains of settlements from the 15th century.
Open-access classicists’ resources exceptionally available

Open-access classicists’ resources exceptionally available

The Consulta Universitaria del Greco (CUG, Association of the Italian Academic Hellenists) has activated a new forum through its website.
Works by the artist Ballester go viral online

Works by the artist Ballester go viral online

Ballester faithfully recreates classic works of art digitally but missing one decisive detail: the human presence.
Rheumatic diseases, the cost of survival during the Little Ice Age

Rheumatic diseases, the cost of survival during the Little Ice Age

A piece of research by the Human Evolutionary Biology Group at the UPV/EHU-University of the Basque Country provides clues about the prevalence of a certain genetic profile in the European population.
Ancient aquatic crocs evolved, enlarged to avoid freezing

Ancient aquatic crocs evolved, enlarged to avoid freezing

Nearly 200 million years ago crocodilian ancestors chose freedom: from gravity, from territorial boundaries, from dietary constraints.
Mesoamerican copper smelting technology aided colonial weaponry

Mesoamerican copper smelting technology aided colonial weaponry

The Spaniards were quite dependent on an older indigenous technology in parts of Mesoamerica (today’s Mexico, Guatemala, Belize, and Honduras).
Van Gogh painting stolen from Dutch museum

Van Gogh painting stolen from Dutch museum

In the early hours of Monday 30 March the painting “Spring Garden, the Parsonage Garden in Nuenen in Spring” (1884) by Vincent van Gogh was stolen from Singer Laren.
‘Watercourts’ stored live fish, fueling Florida’s Calusa kingdom

‘Watercourts’ stored live fish, fueling Florida’s Calusa kingdom

Unlike the Aztecs, Maya and Inca, who built their empires with the help of agriculture, the Calusa kingdom was founded on fishing.
Tree rings could pin down Thera volcano eruption date

Tree rings could pin down Thera volcano eruption date

Research led by the University of Arizona Laboratory of Tree-Ring Research has anchored a long sequence of tree rings, providing context for the civilizations that existed throughout the Bronze and Iron Ages.
Research identifies regular climbing behavior in a human ancestor

Research identifies regular climbing behavior in a human ancestor

A new study led by the University of Kent has found evidence that human ancestors as recent as two million years ago may have regularly climbed trees.
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