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Seeking an ethical approach to ancient DNA analysis

The study of ancient DNA provides valuable insights into human history, including how ancient populations migrated and merged with each other. But discoveries drawn from this ancient genetic data can directly impact the living ...

UK diving team hail suspected WWI warship find

A team of UK divers has hailed the discovery of a wreck off Scotland believed to be a Royal Navy warship sunk during World War I but still "virtually intact".

Stonehenge's Altar Stone origins reveal advanced ancient Britain

New research led by Curtin University has revealed Stonehenge's monumental six-ton Altar Stone, long believed to originate from Wales, actually hails from Scotland. The study titled "A Scottish Provenance for the Altar Stone ...

House call: A new study rethinks early Christian landmark

Since its discovery by modern researchers a century ago, an ancient structure known as the "Christian building" has become widely considered the cornerstone of early Christian architecture. Constructed around 232 C.E. in ...

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Archaeology
Jamestown DNA helps solve a 400-year-old mystery and unexpectedly reveals a family secret
Archaeology
DNA analysis reveals close relative mating and child sacrifice among elites in precontact Mexico
Archaeology
New interpretation of runic inscription reveals pricing in Viking Age
Archaeology
Shipwreck highlights medieval England's lucrative trade in valuable stone
Archaeology
New evidence from West Papua offers fresh clues about how and when humans first moved into the Pacific
Archaeology
Early improvement of sandy habitat led to origin of agriculture in the farming-pastoral zone of northern China: Study
Archaeology
Pre-Mongolian elite grave found in an abandoned fortress
Archaeology
Unveiling the ancient Maya's relationship to animals and nature
Archaeology
Forensic science cracks the 'unsolvable' case of a World War I soldier's identity, enabling his re-burial
Archaeology
New finds in treasure-laden shipwreck off Colombia
Archaeology
Ancient carvings in Turkey could be earliest solar calendar
Archaeology
Wrestling with bulls, meat-only diets and sex bans: How the ancient Olympians prepared
Archaeology
Ancient Chinese bone needle workshop reveals industrial practices of the 2nd millennium BCE
Archaeology
Hydraulic lift technology may have helped build Egypt's iconic Pyramid of Djoser
Archaeology
Persian gold coins likely used to pay mercenaries found at site of ancient Greek city in western Turkey
Archaeology
How the last meal of a 3,000-year-old Egyptian crocodile was revealed using modern science
Archaeology
'Screaming Woman' mummy may have died in agony 3,500 years ago
Archaeology
Medieval French diets discovered through isotope analysis reveal social and religious influences
Archaeology
Anthropologists' quest to save an Alamo cannon
Archaeology
New evidence of Neolithic occupations in the Aragonese site of Huerto Raso

Other news

Astronomy
Astronomers discover new open cluster with Gaia
General Physics
New research suggests a way to capture physicists' most wanted particle—gravitons
Plants & Animals
Antidepressant pollution is rewiring fish behavior and reproduction, biologists reveal
Environment
Coastal cities must adapt faster to climate change, say researchers
Evolution
Plant-eating dinosaurs evolved backup teeth to eat tough food, research reveals
Planetary Sciences
Ice caps on Mars offer clues to ancient climates
Earth Sciences
Ocean spray is relatively lifeless: Sea spray study helps predict climate impact
Planetary Sciences
Geologists discover hidden magmatism at the Chang'e-6 lunar landing site
Ecology
Lack of pollinators limits worldwide food production, crop yield analysis finds
Materials Science
Preventing counterfeiting by adding dye to liquid crystals to create uncrackable coded tags
Superconductivity
Study uncovers broken mirror symmetry in the Fermi-liquid-like phase of a cuprate
Astronomy
Event Horizon Telescope makes highest-resolution black hole detections from Earth
Nanomaterials
New technique shows promise for mass fabricating an exotic quasi-1D material
General Physics
Paper types ranked by likelihood of paper cuts
Analytical Chemistry
Insights into spinel cobalt oxides may lead to efficient ammonia synthesis
Plants & Animals
Kamikaze termites protect their colony with the help of a special enzyme whose secrets have now been uncovered
Social Sciences
Women in global fisheries industry are falling through the safety net, study finds
Astronomy
In six new rogue worlds, Webb Telescope finds more star birth clues
Plants & Animals
New study shows Alaskan snow crab population collapse in Bering Sea due to climate change
Astronomy
Experiment sets new record in search for dark matter

A 3,400-year-old city emerges from the Tigris River

A team of German and Kurdish archaeologists have uncovered a 3,400-year-old Mittani Empire-era city once located on the Tigris River. The settlement emerged from the waters of the Mosul reservoir early this year as water ...

Race to save undersea Stone Age cave art masterpieces

To reach the only place in the world where cave paintings of prehistoric marine life have been found, archaeologists have to dive to the bottom of the Mediterranean off southern France.

Experience influences the visual processing of stone tools

Scientists at the Centro Nacional de Investigación sobre la Evolución Humana (CENIEH) have assessed whether knowledge and experience affect the distribution of the attention during the visual exploration of stone tools, ...

First Pompeiian human genome sequenced

The first successfully sequenced human genome from an individual who died in Pompeii, Italy, after the eruption of Mount Vesuvius in 79 CE is presented this week in a study published in Scientific Reports. Prior to this, ...

The first cave-bound mollusc species from the Americas

Exclusively subterranean bivalves—the group of molluscs comprising clams, oysters, mussels, scallops—are considered a rarity. Prior to the present study, there had only been three such species confirmed in the world: ...

Early urbanism found in the Amazon

More than 20 years ago, Dr. Heiko Prümers from the German Archaeological Institute and Prof. Dr. Carla Jaimes Betancourt from the University of Bonn, at that time a student in La Paz, began archaeological excavations on ...

Nearly 8,000-year-old skull found in Minnesota River

A partial skull that was discovered last summer by two kayakers in Minnesota will be returned to Native American officials after investigations determined it was about 8,000 years old.