AGENDA August 2025

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Students unearth a 2000-year-old Jewish settlement near Bet Shemesh

Students unearth a 2000-year-old Jewish settlement near Bet Shemesh

Boyer High School in Jerusalem will fund most of its youth delegation’s visit to Poland by working at archaeological digs.
Mouse in the house tells tale of human settlement

Mouse in the house tells tale of human settlement

Ancient mice teeth show settled villages made ecological impact long before agriculture.
Meet Neith, creator of the world

Meet Neith, creator of the world

The goddess Neith, “creator of the world”, was brought out of the storerooms of the National Archaeological Museum, to be presented to its visitors and to tell her unknown story.
Long-lost Jewish cemetery uncovered in Rome

Long-lost Jewish cemetery uncovered in Rome

Thirty eight graves were recently uncovered by Italian archaeologists in the Rome’s Trastevere district.
‘Australia’s Jurassic Park’ the world’s most diverse

‘Australia’s Jurassic Park’ the world’s most diverse

An unprecedented 21 different types of dinosaur tracks have been identified on a 25-kilometre stretch of the Dampier Peninsula coastline dubbed 'Australia’s Jurassic Park'.
The Anthropocene: Scientists respond to criticisms of a new geological epoch

The Anthropocene: Scientists respond to criticisms of a new geological epoch

'Irreversible' changes to the Earth provide striking evidence of new epoch, University of Leicester experts suggest.
Under the Dead Sea, warnings of dire drought

Under the Dead Sea, warnings of dire drought

Nearly 1,000 feet below the bed of the Dead Sea, scientists have found evidence that during past warm periods, the Mideast has suffered drought on scales never recorded by humans.
Part of a unique ancient Greek terracotta statue discovered

Part of a unique ancient Greek terracotta statue discovered

Part of a unique terracotta statue has been found during underwater surveys near the Ak-Burun Cape.
Mummy shroud rediscovered in Scotland

Mummy shroud rediscovered in Scotland

A unique, full-length mummy shroud, which is over 2,000 years old yet is still in remarkable condition, has been discovered in National Museums Scotland’s collections.
Archaeological evidence found in Spain indicate cannibalism

Archaeological evidence found in Spain indicate cannibalism

Archaeological evidence found in a cave in Spain indicate that cannibalism took place among ancient humans in the area about 10,000 years ago.
Huns and settlers may have cooperated on the frontier of Roman Empire

Huns and settlers may have cooperated on the frontier of Roman Empire

New research suggests that nomadic Huns and Pannonian settlers on the frontier of Roman Empire may have intermixed.
Alabaster statue of Queen Tiye found in Kom al-Hittan

Alabaster statue of Queen Tiye found in Kom al-Hittan

The European Egyptian mission working in King Amenhotep III funerary temple at Kom Al-Hittan area on Luxor west bank, has uncovered a beautifully carved statue possibly of Queen Tiye.
Reconsidering the Middle Minoan Pottery at Phylakopi in Melos

Reconsidering the Middle Minoan Pottery at Phylakopi in Melos

Cycladic Seminar by Dr J.A. MacGillivray.
Figurine – a microcosm made of clay

Figurine – a microcosm made of clay

Exhibition dedicated to clay figurines.
Intact burial chamber revealed in Qubbet el-Hawa, West Aswan

Intact burial chamber revealed in Qubbet el-Hawa, West Aswan

The Spanish Archaeological Mission in Qubbet El-Hawa, west Aswan, has discovered an intact structure where the brother of one of the most important governors of the 12th Dynasty, Sarenput II, was buried.
New study shakes the roots of the dinosaur family tree

New study shakes the roots of the dinosaur family tree

More than a century of theory about the evolutionary history of dinosaurs has been turned on its head.
Egyptian ritual images from the Neolithic period

Egyptian ritual images from the Neolithic period

Egyptologists at the University of Bonn discovered rock art from the 4th millennium BC during an excavation at a necropolis near Aswan in Egypt.
Graffiti scribbled on ancient cave paintings in Chad

Graffiti scribbled on ancient cave paintings in Chad

Ancient cave paintings at an African Unesco heritage site in north-eastern Chad have been defaced with graffiti.
The Barberini tapestries on show

The Barberini tapestries on show

As of March 21 the Barberini Life of Christ tapestries are hanging in the Cathedral Church of St. John the Divine in Manhattan.
Incunabula. Aspects of Early Greek Printing

Incunabula. Aspects of Early Greek Printing

A selection of 29 incunabula from the Historical Library of the Aikaterini Laskaridis Foundation.
Pompeii and the Greeks

Pompeii and the Greeks

Over 600 exhibits reinterpret places and monuments of the Vesuvian city with their own “biographies”.
Invisible liquid will hopefully deter antiquities smugglers

Invisible liquid will hopefully deter antiquities smugglers

An invisible liquid, a traceable solution, is applied on Syrian artefacts, aiming to save the country's heritage from plundering.
Archaeological excavations in Delphi Late Mycenaean settlement

Archaeological excavations in Delphi Late Mycenaean settlement

The School of Humanities - Department of Mediterranean Studies of the University of the Aegean has issued an announcement about this year's summer school at Delphi.
University of Alcalá Expedition to Deir el-Bahari (Luxor)

University of Alcalá Expedition to Deir el-Bahari (Luxor)

This season the expedition will continue in the northern hills of Deir el-Bahari.
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