AGENDA November 2025

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Casablanca by photographer Melita Vangelatou

Casablanca by photographer Melita Vangelatou

Casablanca, a port-city with a unique and multifaceted character, is presented at the Benaki Museum of Islamic Art through the photographs of Melita Vangelatou.
The export economy of the Iberian Peninsula and their connections with the Eastern Mediterranean

The export economy of the Iberian Peninsula and their connections with the Eastern Mediterranean

The aim of this lecture is to have a look at the economy of ancient Iberian Peninsula based on the current archaeological evidence.
The Archaeological Museum of Karditsa is impressive

The Archaeological Museum of Karditsa is impressive

The Archaeological Museum of Karditsa is inside the city’s urban web, in a neighbourhood that could be described as the town’s “islet of culture”.
Modern apes smarter than pre-humans

Modern apes smarter than pre-humans

New research from the University of Adelaide suggests living great apes are smarter than our pre-human ancestor Australopithecus, a group that included the famous "Lucy."
Scientists explore Egyptian mummy bones with x-rays and infrared light

Scientists explore Egyptian mummy bones with x-rays and infrared light

Researchers from Cairo University work with teams at Berkeley Lab's Advanced Light Source to study soil and bone samples dating back 4,000 years.
Terracina: A Cosmopolitan City Near Rome

Terracina: A Cosmopolitan City Near Rome

In a new excavation project undertaken by German and Italian researchers, LMU archaeologists Paul Scheding and Francesca Diosono have uncovered evidence suggesting that Terracina was the site of the first Hellenistic temple in the region.
‘Ghost’ footprints from Pleistocene era revealed by radar tech

‘Ghost’ footprints from Pleistocene era revealed by radar tech

The fossilized footprints reveal a wealth of information about how humans and animals moved and interacted with each other 12,000 years ago.
Dr Elena Koundouri talks about the excavations at Gla

Dr Elena Koundouri talks about the excavations at Gla

The building facilities at the Mycenaean acropolis of Gla are definitely related with the draining works of the lake, according to the head of the excavations, Dr Elena Koundouri.
New fossil pushes back physical evidence of insect pollination to 99 million years ago

New fossil pushes back physical evidence of insect pollination to 99 million years ago

A new study co-led by researchers in the U.S. and China has pushed back the first-known physical evidence of insect flower pollination to 99 million years ago, during the mid-Cretaceous period.
Early dispersal for quadrupedal cetaceans

Early dispersal for quadrupedal cetaceans

Scientists have a relatively precise idea about where whales and their closest terrestrial relatives evolved more than 50 million years ago (early Eocene), thanks to the discovery of ancient cetacean fossils in India and Pakistan.
Twelfth International Congress of Egyptologists: an overview

Twelfth International Congress of Egyptologists: an overview

ICE XII brought to the spotlight a number of discoveries and opened new paths in the archaeology of ancient Egypt.
New data on the appearance of bipedalism on earth

New data on the appearance of bipedalism on earth

Fossils were discovered in Germany of the Danuvius ape who was perhaps the first in the world to stand on its two legs 11.6 million years ago.
Stanford researchers lay out first genetic history of Rome

Stanford researchers lay out first genetic history of Rome

Rome still holds some secrets, for instance, relatively little is known about the ancestral origins of the city's denizens. Now, an international team led is filling in the gaps.
Motifs in rock art in Sweden show seafaring in the Stone Age

Motifs in rock art in Sweden show seafaring in the Stone Age

South-west Sweden’s best preserved rock painting has now been dated – it is from the late Stone Age.
Andy Warhol: Revelation

Andy Warhol: Revelation

First exhibition to comprehensively examine the Pop artist’s complex Catholic faith in relation to his artistic production.
The Mycenaean citadel of Agios Andreas in Sifnos

The Mycenaean citadel of Agios Andreas in Sifnos

Recent excavations have revealed most of the Acropolis, as well as its complex Mycenaean defense system, one unique to the Aegean.
Important new finds from the acropolis of Gla

Important new finds from the acropolis of Gla

Unlike other large Mycenaean acropoleis which have been repeatedly modified, Glas presents a noticeably clear and rare uniform architectural design.
Drones reveal secrets of ancient Florida village

Drones reveal secrets of ancient Florida village

Using drone technology, a team of UF researchers has uncovered how an ancient Florida village played a pivotal role in pre-Columbian geopolitics.
How Human Population came from our ability to cooperate

How Human Population came from our ability to cooperate

Humans may owe their place as Earth's dominating species to their ability to share and cooperate with each other.
The genetic imprint of Palaeolithic has been detected in North African populations

The genetic imprint of Palaeolithic has been detected in North African populations

They have identified a small genetic imprint of the inhabitants of the region in Palaeolithic times, thus ruling out the theory that recent migrations from other regions completely erased the genetic traces of ancient North Africans.
Five shipwrecks located off Kasos

Five shipwrecks located off Kasos

Important archaeological data is among the finds of the first underwater research expedition off the island of Kasos.
Funded M.A. in Early Christian Studies

Funded M.A. in Early Christian Studies

The M.A. in Early Christian Studies at Notre Dame prepares students for doctoral studies in all aspects of early Christian and late ancient studies.
The Staffordshire Hoard

The Staffordshire Hoard

The book tells the story of the Staffordshire Hoard’s discovery and acquisition, and the six-year research project that pieced its fragments back together.
Humans migrated from Europe to the Levant 40,000 years ago

Humans migrated from Europe to the Levant 40,000 years ago

Discovery of teeth in Manot Cave sheds light on a population known for its cultural contributions, Tel Aviv University researchers say.
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