AGENDA December 2025

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Egyptian tomb with ten crocodile mummies discovered 

Egyptian tomb with ten crocodile mummies discovered 

Spanish archaeologists made an unusual discovery in southern Egypt: a still undisturbed tomb containing ten mummified crocodiles.
Culture and Society in Greek, Roman, and Byzantine Egypt

Culture and Society in Greek, Roman, and Byzantine Egypt

The American Society of Papyrologists invites proposals for papers for its panel “Culture and Society in Greek, Roman, and Byzantine Egypt” at the 2024 meeting.
High mobility of ancient hunter-gatherers 7,500 years ago

High mobility of ancient hunter-gatherers 7,500 years ago

International research team says highly connected gene pools over vast distances suggest migrations were common in North Asia since at least the Early Holocene.
Fossilised nests of the world’s largest dinosaur discovered in India

Fossilised nests of the world’s largest dinosaur discovered in India

More than 250 titanosaur eggs have been uncovered in India, revealing more about the lives of some of the largest animals which ever lived.
Archaeologist awarded NSF grant to study prehistoric city creation

Archaeologist awarded NSF grant to study prehistoric city creation

The ancient Native American city of Cahokia is located near modern-day St. Louis, on the Illinois side of the Mississippi River.
Cognitive Science and the Ancient Mediterranean

Cognitive Science and the Ancient Mediterranean

The graduate students of the Cornell University Department of Classics invites papers from a range of institutions and expertise in and beyond Greece and Rome to discuss these and related questions in the field.
Found the world’s oldest rune stone

Found the world’s oldest rune stone

An ancient Norwegian rune stone is attracting international attention among runic scholars and archaeologists. The inscriptions are up to 2,000 years old and date back to the earliest days of the enigmatic history of runic writing.
Quantity and Quality. The World of Greek Terracottas

Quantity and Quality. The World of Greek Terracottas

The exhibition Quantity and Quality at the Altes Museum focuses on the contexts in which clay figures were used, and provides new perspectives on this often overlooked medium.
Marriage in Minoan Crete

Marriage in Minoan Crete

An international team of researchers from the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology in Leipzig, Germany, achieves completely new insights into Bronze Age marriage rules and family structures in Greece.
Royal tomb discovery reported at Luxor’s Western Valleys

Royal tomb discovery reported at Luxor’s Western Valleys

The discovery has been reported at Luxor’s Western Valleys’ area SW of the Valley of the Kings, on the Nile’s west bank opposite Luxor.
Greece in Egypt and Egypt in Greece, from Homer to Rome and Byzantium

Greece in Egypt and Egypt in Greece, from Homer to Rome and Byzantium

A project aiming to study the multifold cultural interactions between Greece and Egypt from prehistory up to the Byzantine period.
Alexander Graham Bell’s experimental sound recordings to be preserved

Alexander Graham Bell’s experimental sound recordings to be preserved

The Smithsonian’s National Museum of American History will embark this fall on a new round of sound recovery to restore some of the world’s earliest recordings.
Mainz University contributes to recent discovery of the temple of Poseidon

Mainz University contributes to recent discovery of the temple of Poseidon

Natural Hazard Research and Geoarchaeology team of JGU is investigating coastal developments in Western Greece over the last 11,600 years.
Headless skeletons in a settlement trench: A 7000-year-old mass grave?

Headless skeletons in a settlement trench: A 7000-year-old mass grave?

Archaeologists from the Collaborative Research Centre (SFB) 1266 came across an unusual find during this year's excavations in Slovakia.
Bogs reveal millennia-old stories about violence and religion

Bogs reveal millennia-old stories about violence and religion

An international team of archaeologists and earth scientists have analysed hundreds of human remains found in Europe’s wetlands.
House of the Vettii in Pompeii re-opened

House of the Vettii in Pompeii re-opened

The lavish house in Pompeii has opened its doors to the public after two decades of restoration.
Three people arrested for trying to steal Ramesses II statue

Three people arrested for trying to steal Ramesses II statue

Three men sneaked into the southern quarry area in Upper Egypt governate of Aswan, where they planned to lift the 10-tons Ramesses II statue with a crane.
4,000-year-old ostrich eggs uncovered in the Negev dunes

4,000-year-old ostrich eggs uncovered in the Negev dunes

They were discovered next to an ancient fire pit in an IAA excavation, initiated by the JNF and the Ramat Negev Regional Council.
Nouveau réalisme at Basil & Elise Goulandris Foundation

Nouveau réalisme at Basil & Elise Goulandris Foundation

The exhibition features more than 50 works and justifies the instinct of Basil and Elise Goulandris, who paid tribute to the movement.
At the Uffizi Galleries a masterpiece of Risorgimento painting

At the Uffizi Galleries a masterpiece of Risorgimento painting

The painting portrays the character in a cell, in the Spielberg prison; now on view at the Uffizi, in spring it will begin an exhibition tour in various locations in Tuscany.
Many sources about Copernicus still await discovery

Many sources about Copernicus still await discovery

An interview with historian and philosopher of science, Professor Michał Kokowski.
Riddle solved: Why was Roman concrete so durable?

Riddle solved: Why was Roman concrete so durable?

An unexpected ancient manufacturing strategy may hold the key to designing concrete that lasts for millennia.
Unsung Pioneer Women in the Archaeology of Greece

Unsung Pioneer Women in the Archaeology of Greece

The Workshop “Unsung Pioneer Women in the Archaeology of Greece” will be held on March 8, 2023, in the École française d’Athènes.
Digital Tools for Cultural Heritage Management

Digital Tools for Cultural Heritage Management

Digital tools for heritage management is a specialized course on spatial data (GIS), laser scanning, 3D modeling, heritage management, and community management.
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