AGENDA January 2026

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A sub-desert savanna spread across Madrid 14 million years ago

A sub-desert savanna spread across Madrid 14 million years ago

In this study paleontologists have been able to infer that the centre of the Iberian Peninsula witnessed a very arid tropical climate with a high precipitation seasonality.
‘Wooden shoe’ rather wear sneakers?

‘Wooden shoe’ rather wear sneakers?

Western University research shows long-lasting issues from inflexible clogs.
Human evolution was uneven and punctuated

Human evolution was uneven and punctuated

A new study in Heliyon suggests that Neanderthals survived at least 3,000 years longer in Spain than we thought.
Australia’s oldest ancestor to be reburied on local ground

Australia’s oldest ancestor to be reburied on local ground

In a special ceremony in Canberra, the remains of Mungo Man, the first known Australian, have set off to a repatriation journey to Lake Mungo.
Study settles prehistoric puzzle, confirms modern link of carbon dioxide & global warming

Study settles prehistoric puzzle, confirms modern link of carbon dioxide & global warming

Fossil leaves from Africa have resolved a prehistoric climate puzzle — and also confirm the link between carbon dioxide in the atmosphere and global warming.
Hidden Cultural Heritage

Hidden Cultural Heritage

The International Congress on the theme of the Hidden Cultural Heritage (HCH) wants to draw attention on the protection strategies and management of the underwater cultural heritage in the Mediterranean sea.
Hadrian and Antinous: a meeting after 19 centuries

Hadrian and Antinous: a meeting after 19 centuries

An exhibition of the inscribed base of a monument in honour of the emperor Hadrian and an outstanding portrait of Antinous, his attendant and favourite.
New treasures from Tutankhamun’s tomb

New treasures from Tutankhamun’s tomb

As part of a German-Egyptian project, archaeologists from Tübingen for the first time examine embossed gold applications from the sensational find of 1922. The motifs indicate surprising links between the Levant and the Egypt of the pharaohs.
Cultural Heritage Infrastructures in Digital Humanities

Cultural Heritage Infrastructures in Digital Humanities

In this book, authors from a wide range of countries, representing some of the best research projects in digital humanities related to cultural heritage, discuss their latest findings.
Byzantium and the Modern Imagination

Byzantium and the Modern Imagination

Byzantium and the Modern Imagination. Patterns of the Reception of Byzantium in Modern Culture will take place in Brno, on 12-14 September 2018.
Saviour of the World sells for record $450m

Saviour of the World sells for record $450m

At the packed Christie’s auction room, Leonardo da Vinci’s work “Salvator Mundi” was sold for a record price of $450m, yesterday, November 15, 2017.
Article on the behaviour of German archaeologists during the Occupation in Greece

Article on the behaviour of German archaeologists during the Occupation in Greece

The article entitled “Massacres and some beautiful souvenirs” was published in the cultural inset of the newspaper Süddeutsche Zeitung.
Ancient life form discovered in remote Tasmanian valley

Ancient life form discovered in remote Tasmanian valley

A team of Tasmanian researchers has uncovered rare, living stromatolites deep within the Tasmanian Wilderness World Heritage Area.
Medieval treasure unearthed at the Abbey of Cluny

Medieval treasure unearthed at the Abbey of Cluny

A large medieval treasure has been unearthed during excavations last September at the Abbey of Cluny, a former Benedictine monastery in Cluny, Saône-et-Loire, France.  
Coffin and mummy found in Deir al-Banat

Coffin and mummy found in Deir al-Banat

The Egyptian-Russian archaeological mission working in the Archaeological Site of  Deir al-Banat (Monastery of Al-Banat) in Fayoum Governorate uncovered a wooden coffin with a mummy inside that are dated back to the Greaco-Roman era.
Medieval Jewish cemetery rediscovered in Bologna

Medieval Jewish cemetery rediscovered in Bologna

The Medieval Jewish cemetery of Bologna, destroyed in 1569, has been discovered, authorities announced last week.
World’s longest sauropod dinosaur trackway brought to light

World’s longest sauropod dinosaur trackway brought to light

In 2009, the world's largest dinosaur tracks were discovered in the French village of Plagne, in the Jura Mountains.
Archaeologists find earliest evidence of winemaking

Archaeologists find earliest evidence of winemaking

Excavations in the Republic of Georgia by the Gadachrili Gora Regional Archaeological Project Expedition (GRAPE), a joint undertaking between the University of Toronto (U of T) and the Georgian National Museum, have uncovered evidence of the earliest winemaking anywhere in the world.
Dover Western Docks Revival makes Mammoth Discovery

Dover Western Docks Revival makes Mammoth Discovery

Mammoth discovery made after unearthing a fossilised mammoth tooth during the excavation of the Wellington Dock Navigation Channel.
A Tale of Social Bioarchaeology: Human Bones, Burial Practices and Social Dynamics in Mycenaean Achaia

A Tale of Social Bioarchaeology: Human Bones, Burial Practices and Social Dynamics in Mycenaean Achaia

This lecture presents a holistic bioarchaeological approach to the social dimensions of Mycenaean mortuary practice, with special reference to the treatment of the dead body.
Cannonball found in underwater excavations was from the San Francisco shipwreck

Cannonball found in underwater excavations was from the San Francisco shipwreck

Underwater archaeologists have found a cannonball thought to have belonged to a Ship that sank in 1609.
The Fontana di Trevi coins will now be paid to the Municipality

The Fontana di Trevi coins will now be paid to the Municipality

The Municipality of Rome decided to create a Fund that from April 1, will collect the money from all fountains of the Eternal City, including its most famous one.
Grasshopper found in a work of 1889 by Vincent Van Gogh

Grasshopper found in a work of 1889 by Vincent Van Gogh

The discovery was made, 128 years after the painting was created, by the fine art’s conservator Mary Schafer, according to the museum’s announcement.
Why did the Earth’s ancient oceans disappear?

Why did the Earth’s ancient oceans disappear?

Geoscientists at the Centre for Earth Evolution and Dynamics (CEED), University of Oslo have found a novel way of mappingh the Earth's ancient oceans.
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