AGENDA September 2025

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A Boomerang from the Ice Age

A Boomerang from the Ice Age

What if a 40,000-year-old boomerang could change everything we thought we knew about the earliest modern humans in Europe?
Ancient temple ruins discovered in Andes

Ancient temple ruins discovered in Andes

An ancient society near the southern shores of Lake Titicaca in modern-day Bolivia was once one of the continent’s most powerful civilizations.
Digging backward through history lights the way forward

Digging backward through history lights the way forward

Archaeologists this summer uncovered a remarkable find: the near-complete 18th-century foundation of the Williamsburg Bray School.
Manchester researchers help to uncover ancient Egyptian city

Manchester researchers help to uncover ancient Egyptian city

Archaeologists from The University of Manchester have played a leading role in the rediscovery of the ancient city of Imet.
Did incestuous ‘god-kings’ rule during Neolithic Ireland?

Did incestuous ‘god-kings’ rule during Neolithic Ireland?

New research cast doubts over suggestions an incestuous social elite ruled over the ancient people of Ireland, 5500 years ago.
Digitization for Cultural Preservation in Tuvalu

Digitization for Cultural Preservation in Tuvalu

The Pacific island nation of Tuvalu stands as a stark example of the devastating impacts of climate change...
Cooking for the craft

Cooking for the craft

A pioneering study shows how prehistoric communities in north-eastern Europe extracted animal teeth for crafting personal ornaments.
UC experts share Griffin Warrior with America

UC experts share Griffin Warrior with America

The UC Classics researchers in 2015 uncovered the tomb of a Mycenaean leader they called the Griffin Warrior.
Archaeologists confirm Venus of Kołobrzeg’s age

Archaeologists confirm Venus of Kołobrzeg’s age

A small limestone figurine discovered by a farmer near the Baltic coastal city of Kołobrzeg dates back approximately 6,000 years.
Earliest evidence of humans in the Americas confirmed

Earliest evidence of humans in the Americas confirmed

Tracks showed human activity in the area occurred between 23,000 and 21,000 years ago – indicating when cultures developed in North America.
Humans learned to thrive in diverse habitats

Humans learned to thrive in diverse habitats

Before the ‘Out of Africa’ migration, new research shows that humans expanded their niche to include African forests and deserts.
Τhe incredible journey of dogs in the Americas

Τhe incredible journey of dogs in the Americas

A new study from the University of Oxford shows how dogs slowly spread southward alongside early farming societies. 
Crno Jezero Cave unveils 4,000 years of Illyrian and Prehistoric life

Crno Jezero Cave unveils 4,000 years of Illyrian and Prehistoric life

Archaeologists from the Dubrovnik Museums recently uncovered a wealth of archaeological artifacts in Crno Jezero Cave.
Rare Medieval sword discovered in the Netherlands

Rare Medieval sword discovered in the Netherlands

A remarkable medieval sword, dating back to 1050-1150 AD, was uncovered last year in the Dutch province of Utrecht.
Australia’s oldest occupied Ice Age cave

Australia’s oldest occupied Ice Age cave

New evidence found in an ancient Blue Mountains cave overturns the theory that Australia's high country was unoccupied during the Ice Age.
Archaeologists discover France’s deepest shipwreck

Archaeologists discover France’s deepest shipwreck

On June 12, researchers identified the remains of a 16th‑c. merchant vessel lying more than 2.5 km beneath the Mediterranean Sea.
Scientists uncover massive fossil salamander

Scientists uncover massive fossil salamander

The fossil found near East Tennessee State University leads to a better understanding of how it helped shape Appalachian amphibian diversity. 
Pits, wells and a burial found in Delbrück-Bentfeld

Pits, wells and a burial found in Delbrück-Bentfeld

In the village of Delbrück-Bentfeld, eastern Germany, archaeologists have wrapped up an extensive months-long excavation.
Stolen paintings recovered and returned to New Mexico museum

Stolen paintings recovered and returned to New Mexico museum

The paintings, by Victor Higgins and by Joseph Henry Sharp, were stolen in March of 1985 from Harwood, a public library at the time.
Facets of daily life came to light at Finziade, Italy

Facets of daily life came to light at Finziade, Italy

Archaeologists working at Finziade, located in southern Italy, recently uncovered remarkable finds at an unexplored area of the site.
San José: World’s richest shipwreck

San José: World’s richest shipwreck

Since 2015, four non-invasive campaigns have surveyed the San José Galleon shipwreck in the Colombian Caribbean...
Ancient DNA uncovers rare matrilineal society in prehistoric China

Ancient DNA uncovers rare matrilineal society in prehistoric China

A team of researchers have found genetic evidence of a rare matrilineal community dating back more than 4000 years.
Closest known ancestor of tyrannosaurs

Closest known ancestor of tyrannosaurs

Palaeontologists have identified a new species of dinosaur, named Khankhuuluu, which is the closest-known ancestor to the gigantic tyrannosaurs.
Memory, Violence and Landscape

Memory, Violence and Landscape

The conference programme for “Memory, Violence and Landscape in the Ancient and Medieval World” at Royal Holloway, University of London.
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