AGENDA August 2025

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Specialization in sheep farming in early Neolithic communities

Specialization in sheep farming in early Neolithic communities

The specialization in sheep in the early Neolithic populations of Dalmatia, Croatia, may have been related to the rapid expansion of these communities.
Still-life with pizza-like dish uncovered at Pompeii

Still-life with pizza-like dish uncovered at Pompeii

A fresco depicting still life, uncovered recently during the latest excavations at Insula 10 of the Regio IX area at Pompeii.
The Society for the Study of Egyptian Antiquities Symposium 2023

The Society for the Study of Egyptian Antiquities Symposium 2023

The Society for the Study of Egyptian Antiquities/Société pour l’Étude de l’Égypte Ancienne invites all doctoral level graduate students and senior scholars to submit proposals for papers.
An Archaeology of Disability at the  Canellopoulos Museum

An Archaeology of Disability at the Canellopoulos Museum

The Canellopoulos Museum hosts the installation AN ARCHAEOLOGY OF DISABILITY, which was first exhibited at the Venice Biennale of Architecture in 2021.
Humans butchered and ate each other 1.45 million years ago

Humans butchered and ate each other 1.45 million years ago

Telltale marks on a bone from an early human’s leg could be the earliest evidence of cannibalism.
Animals and the Environment in Ancient Mediterranean Medicine

Animals and the Environment in Ancient Mediterranean Medicine

Registration reminder: In person registration closes this week!
Egypt in the First Intermediate Period: The History and Chronology of its False Doors and Stelae

Egypt in the First Intermediate Period: The History and Chronology of its False Doors and Stelae

This volume provides a detailed study of false doors and funerary stelae from the First Intermediate Period, providing new historical and chronological insights.
Cannibalism among the Neanderthals of the Coves del Toll de Moià

Cannibalism among the Neanderthals of the Coves del Toll de Moià

The excavation campaign in the Cova de les Teixoneres has made it possible to recover two skull fragments of a 52,000-year-old juvenile Neanderthal.
Largest repatriation of ancient coins to Greece in recent HSI history

Largest repatriation of ancient coins to Greece in recent HSI history

HSI Chicago returned stolen antiquities to Greek ambassador to US.
Archaeologists discover 4000 year old sanctuary with solar calendar in Tiel

Archaeologists discover 4000 year old sanctuary with solar calendar in Tiel

A large sanctuary has been discovered in Tiel that is 4000 years old and was dedicated to the sun, just like in the English Stonehenge.
Excavations at Dromolaxia-Vyzakia (Hala Sultan Tekke)

Excavations at Dromolaxia-Vyzakia (Hala Sultan Tekke)

The 2023 excavations at Dromolaxia-Vyzakia (Hala Sultan Tekke) by an international team have been completed.
Centuries old paintings of Guatemalan dancers and guitarists

Centuries old paintings of Guatemalan dancers and guitarists

Dancers in rich costumes and musicians playing drums, flutes and guitars can be found in paintings dating back several hundred years in houses in Chajul, Guatemala.
Oldest known Neanderthal engravings unearthed in French cave

Oldest known Neanderthal engravings unearthed in French cave

Neanderthals might have been making some of Europe’s oldest art thousands of years before the arrival of humans.
New research project about the Viking warriors

New research project about the Viking warriors

The project will fit particularly well into the museum's research work in relation to the upcoming Museum of the Viking Age.
The first prehistoric wind instruments discovered in the Levant

The first prehistoric wind instruments discovered in the Levant

Seven prehistoric wind instruments known as flutes, were recently identified by Franco-Israeli team at the prehistoric site of Eynan-Mallaha.
Laocoön and His Sons in Frankfurt

Laocoön and His Sons in Frankfurt

Goethe University’s Sculpture Hall has received a prominent addition: a true-to-original copy of the monumental statue of Laocoön and his sons.
Gustav Klimt’s Lady with a Fan Comes to Auction at Sotheby’s

Gustav Klimt’s Lady with a Fan Comes to Auction at Sotheby’s

“Dame mit Fächer (Lady with a Fan) is the last portrait Gustav Klimt created before his untimely death, when still in his artistic prime.
PhD position in the History of Late Antiquity

PhD position in the History of Late Antiquity

In the Department of History at Ghent University (Belgium), one PhD studentship is available for a period of up to four years.
Ancient Tribal earth ovens excavated in Washington State

Ancient Tribal earth ovens excavated in Washington State

Ancient Tribal earth ovens built long before the Egyptian pyramids are being excavated as part of the first archeological project made public by the Kalispel Tribe of Indians. 
The Trumpington Cross burial

The Trumpington Cross burial

The face of a 16-year-old woman buried near Cambridge in the 7th century has been reconstructed following analysis of her skull.
The NAM’s mummies undergo imaging examination

The NAM’s mummies undergo imaging examination

The transportation of four Ptolemaic mummies of the National Archaeological Museum (NAM) Egyptian Collection, and their imaging examination with the use of a CT scanner have been completed.
‘Lucy’ could stand as erect as we can

‘Lucy’ could stand as erect as we can

A Cambridge University researcher has digitally reconstructed the missing soft tissue of an early human ancestor – or hominin.
Rare bronze hand discovered in Roman Vindolanda

Rare bronze hand discovered in Roman Vindolanda

A small, child sized, and eerily life-like bronze hand had been discarded in the ditch.
About 20 ‘Polish Stonehenge’ structures have been identified

About 20 ‘Polish Stonehenge’ structures have been identified

Monumental structures dating back 7,000 years and reaching over 100m in diameter, remained unknown in Poland until the 1990s.
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