A kauri tree preserved in a New Zealand has revealed a new mechanism that may explain how temperatures in the Northern Hemisphere spiked several degrees centigrade in just a few decades during the last global ice age.
New impressive entrances were discovered in the Minoan palace of Zominthos on Psiloritis Mountain during this year’s six week excavation by Dr Efi Sapouna-Sakellarakis.
Learning to cultivate crops and other agricultural food – rather than relying on hunter-gathering – is often thought of as a key milestone in the history of humanity.
The presence of such an extensive field of teeth provides clues to how the intriguing feeding mechanism seen in modern amphibians was also likely used by their ancient ancestors.
'I am an egotist. My collection is only for myself ... and a few friends' stated Claude Monet (1840-1926), around 1900, to journalists who visited him at his home in Giverny.
As mentioned in the announcement by the Ministry of Culture and Sports, this move strengthens the already very good collaboration between two countries with a significant cultural past in their fight against the illicit trafficking of antiquities.
A geology professor at Lund University in Sweden has figuratively speaking breathed life into one of science’s most well-known fossil species; Agnostus pisiformis.
A new study led by a Monash biologist has provided fresh information on the origin of one of the major baleen whale lineages, which helps to connect living whales with their deep evolutionary past.
The tomb of a Maya ruler excavated this summer at the Classic Maya city of Waka’ in northern Guatemala is the oldest royal tomb yet to be discovered at the site.
It lived well over 550 million years ago, is known only through fossils and has variously been described as looking a bit like a jellyfish, a worm, a fungus and lichen...
The concept and associated value of the mathematical symbol ‘zero’ is used the world over as a fundamental numerical pillar. However, its origin has until now been one of the field’s greatest conundrums.
Lord Andrew Colin Renfrew talks to Eleni Markou. He is currently in Greece to continue the excavations he is jointly heading on Keros, the most ancient island sanctuary in the world.