AGENDA January 2026

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Previously hidden ancient earthworks in the Amazon revealed

Previously hidden ancient earthworks in the Amazon revealed

Ancient earthworks built in the Amazon have been revealed due to deforestation and modern technologies.
Scientists unlock secrets of oldest surviving global trade map

Scientists unlock secrets of oldest surviving global trade map

The origins and secrets of the 17th Century 'Selden Map of China' – the world's oldest surviving merchant map – have been revealed by scientists using state-of-the-art imaging techniques.
New finds in Pi-Ramesses

New finds in Pi-Ramesses

Colourful wall-paintings, mortar-pits with feet impressions of children and moulds for royal amulets were discovered in Pi-Ramesses ancient city.
Dinosaurs: Juvenile, adult or senior?

Dinosaurs: Juvenile, adult or senior?

Palaeontologists at the University of Bonn estimate by means of bone structures whether a particular dinosaur fossil is a young, adult or very old animal.
Shifting monsoon altered early cultures in China

Shifting monsoon altered early cultures in China

The monsoon’s changes over the past 10,000 years likely altered the course of early human cultures in China.
Mummified pair from Siberia grave to be re-examined

Mummified pair from Siberia grave to be re-examined

A mummified pair unearthed from a grave in Siberia 68 years ago is examined with new technologies yielding details and new information.
A coin for the dead, coins for the living

A coin for the dead, coins for the living

This conference will be held at the Belgian School at Athens/Netherlands Institute at Athens on November 23-24, 2017.
This spiny slug blazed a trail for snails

This spiny slug blazed a trail for snails

Reach back far enough in the family tree of a snail or a clam and you’ll find a spiny little slug with tiny teeth, wearing a helmet.
The New Archaeological Museum of Thebes

The New Archaeological Museum of Thebes

The Thebes museum now constitutes the main cultural hub of the town and a significant tourist attraction, playing an important role in the growth both of Thebes and the whole of Boeotia.
New discoveries on Bronze Age site in the Cyclades

New discoveries on Bronze Age site in the Cyclades

Archaeologists have discovered an ancient staircase and causeway linking two parts of the site on the Greek island of Keros, in the Cyclades.
A New Roof for the Historical Arena di Verona

A New Roof for the Historical Arena di Verona

schlaich bergermann partner and gmp Architekten von Gerkan Marg und Partner are the winners of an International Competition of Ideas to cover the Verona Arena, the city's ancient Roman Amphitheatre.
Roman house with ornate mosaic and hypocaust discovered in Leicester

Roman house with ornate mosaic and hypocaust discovered in Leicester

‘Fantastic mosaic’ and home with underfloor heating among new evidence discovered from Leicester’s Roman past.
Heidelberg Castle Revisited

Heidelberg Castle Revisited

Architectural historian Julian Hanschke of the Karlsruhe Institute of Technology has digitally reconstructed Heidelberg Castle. In his reconstruction every small detail is based on historical sources.
Oldest prostate stones found in Sudan prehistoric cemetery

Oldest prostate stones found in Sudan prehistoric cemetery

Findings from a prehistoric site in Sudan show that prostate stones is a condition that tormented man as early as 12,000 years ago.
Landscapes of War

Landscapes of War

This panel focuses specifically on war landscapes, whether real or imagined.
Diversity in Classics

Diversity in Classics

The 2017 Annual Meeting of the Women's Classical Committee seeks to highlight current feminist and gender-informed research in classical studies, and to discuss issues facing women in Classics.
Masterpieces never sleep

Masterpieces never sleep

Lesha Limonov came up with a unique and fascinating idea for the International Rijksstudio Award 2017...
Ethiopian site sheds new light on human behaviour in the Middle and Late Stone Age

Ethiopian site sheds new light on human behaviour in the Middle and Late Stone Age

Recent sedimentological and dating results from the sequence of Goda Buticha cave, southeastern Ethiopia, yield new data on human occupation of the region during the period 65,000 to 1,000 years ago.
Violence in humans has some deep evolutionary roots

Violence in humans has some deep evolutionary roots

'Are humans naturally violent, as Hobbes said, or peaceful beings to whom civilization corrupts, as Rousseau suggested?'
Treasures from China’s Han Dynasty at San Francisco’s Asian Art Museum

Treasures from China’s Han Dynasty at San Francisco’s Asian Art Museum

On view for the first time in the U.S., 160 rare selections from recent excavations.
Ushabti figurine found in London to be returned

Ushabti figurine found in London to be returned

An ancient Ushabti statue that had been missing from an Aswan museum has been found in London and returned to Egypt.
Ancient DNA reveals ‘continuity’ between Stone Age and modern populations in East Asia

Ancient DNA reveals ‘continuity’ between Stone Age and modern populations in East Asia

Researchers working on ancient DNA extracted from human remains have found that the genetic makeup of certain modern East Asian populations closely resemble that of their hunter-gatherer ancestors.
New field season at the Engel Ela-Ramud basin, Eritrea

New field season at the Engel Ela-Ramud basin, Eritrea

A few days ago a research team from IPHES left to Eritrea, to develop a new field season at the Engel Ela-Ramud basin, in the Danakil depression, next to the Ethiopian border.
Bag-like sea creature was humans’ oldest known ancestor

Bag-like sea creature was humans’ oldest known ancestor

Researchers have identified traces of what they believe is the earliest known prehistoric ancestor of humans – a microscopic, bag-like sea creature, which lived about 540 million years ago.
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