AGENDA August 2025

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Centenary Awards 2015 of the Egypt Exploration Society

Centenary Awards 2015 of the Egypt Exploration Society

The Society welcomes applications for fieldwork and also for museum/archive-based research.
Beans in the Caribbean?

Beans in the Caribbean?

Cuban and Canadian researchers demonstrated the use of cultivated plants in the Caribbean well before the commonly accepted advancement of agricultural groups in the region at around AD 500.
Great Wonders Lectures at the Penn Museum

Great Wonders Lectures at the Penn Museum

"The Great Wonders of the World" lectures organized by the Penn Museum are a series of presentations about the seven wonders of the world and other great monuments of archaeological interest.
A.G. Leventis Fellowship in Hellenic Studies

A.G. Leventis Fellowship in Hellenic Studies

The fellowship aims to support research into the anthropology, archaeology, architecture, arts, etc. of Greece and Cyprus, and related areas, in all periods to modern times.
Neanderthal bone flutes were the work of scavenging hyenas

Neanderthal bone flutes were the work of scavenging hyenas

The Neanderthal bone flutes were not instruments, nor human made, but products of the most important cave bear scavengers of Europe, hyenas.
Dates Obtained for Altamura Man

Dates Obtained for Altamura Man

Over twenty years from its discovery, an international study led by the University of Florence and the University of Rome 1 “La Sapienza” proves that the Altamura Man has lived around 150,000 years ago.
Stone tools at least 206,000 years old found in Greece

Stone tools at least 206,000 years old found in Greece

Stone implements from a higher sediment layer at a site known as Kokkinopilos date back to about 206,000 years ago.
Research Scholarships for young researchers

Research Scholarships for young researchers

The Hardt Foundation for the Study of Classical Antiquity offers young researchers an opportunity to apply for research scholarships covering stays of two to four weeks.
Space Syntax Applications in Archeological Context

Space Syntax Applications in Archeological Context

A lecture about systematic understanding and “calculation” of space and its main properties by using a software that is designed for performing this kind of analysis.
Mantua’s Palazzo Ducale Bridal Chamber reopens

Mantua’s Palazzo Ducale Bridal Chamber reopens

Three years after it was damaged by an earthquake, the Camera degli Sposi (Bridal Chamber), a Renaissance art decorated room has reopened at Mantua's Palazzo Ducale.
Egyptian Museum in Turin inaugurated after overhaul

Egyptian Museum in Turin inaugurated after overhaul

The almost 200-year-old Egyptian Museum in Turin, which has undergone renovation works for the past five years, has now opened to the public.
Two Old Kingdom tombs found in excellent condition

Two Old Kingdom tombs found in excellent condition

Two Old Kingdom tombs were discovered south of Sakkara at the site Tabit El-Geish in Egypt. The 6th Dynasty tombs were discovered during excavations conducted by the Institut Français d’archéologie Orientale (IFAO) at the necropolis.
Honolulu Museum of Art aids international antiquities theft investigation

Honolulu Museum of Art aids international antiquities theft investigation

Seven artefacts from India at the Honolulu Museum of Art have been identified as stolen and handed in by the Museum to Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents and will be returned to India.
Egyptian ‘Meidum Geese’ are possibly a forgery

Egyptian ‘Meidum Geese’ are possibly a forgery

'The Meidum Geese', a 4,500-year-old ancient Egyptian painting on plaster, currently on display in the Egyptian Museum in Cairo, is argued to be a forgery by an Italian researcher.
Egyptian artefacts from looted tomb found in Israel

Egyptian artefacts from looted tomb found in Israel

Egyptian artefacts, about 3,000 years old, have been unearthed from an underground cave in Israel, placed there by tomb robbers, according to Inspectors of the IAA's Unit for the Prevention of Antiquities Robbery.
New dating method says Little Foot is 3.67 million years old

New dating method says Little Foot is 3.67 million years old

A skeleton named Little Foot is among the oldest hominid skeletons ever dated at 3.67 million years old, according to an advanced dating method.
Complete camel skeleton unearthed in Austria

Complete camel skeleton unearthed in Austria

Archaeologists working on an excavation in Tulln, Austria, uncovered a complete camel skeleton, dated to the time of the Second Ottoman War in the 17th century
1,000 human remains beneath Cambridge College

1,000 human remains beneath Cambridge College

Archaeological investigations discovered one of Britain’s largest medieval hospital cemeteries, containing over 1,000 human remains, when excavating beneath the Old Divinity School at St John’s College, Cambridge, a new report shows.
New radiocarbon dating technique will revolutionise field archaeology

New radiocarbon dating technique will revolutionise field archaeology

A new carbon dating technique which will reduce the wait for results from more than six weeks to two days, all for a lower cost than traditional methods.
Iron Age fortified settlements unearthed in Poland

Iron Age fortified settlements unearthed in Poland

Fortified settlements from the 3rd century BC have been discovered by archaeologists in Stary Folwark, Tątławki and Wieprz. The team used airborne laser scanning (ALS) to survey forested areas, previously difficult to access for archaeologists.
Two new species of predatory fishes discovered

Two new species of predatory fishes discovered

Working with an international team, paleontologists at the University of Zurich have discovered two new species of Saurichthys.
New lobster-like predator found in 508 million-year-old fossil-rich site

New lobster-like predator found in 508 million-year-old fossil-rich site

What do butterflies, spiders and lobsters have in common? They are all surviving relatives of a newly identified species called Yawunik kootenayi...
Seven horses and a camel show early hunters in Calgary 13,300 years ago

Seven horses and a camel show early hunters in Calgary 13,300 years ago

Mike Waters and and his colleagues coexamined the skeletal remains of seven horses and one camel found in an area called Wally’s Beach, located about 80 miles south of Calgary in Canada.
How did the chicken cross the sea?

How did the chicken cross the sea?

Through investigating the murky genetic origins of the chickens, a Michigan State University research team sought to gain insights into the ongoing evolution of the population.
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