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'Screaming Woman' mummy may have died in agony 3,500 years ago

In 1935, the Metropolitan Museum of New York led an archaeological expedition to Egypt. In Deir Elbahari near Luxor, the site of ancient Thebes, they excavated the tomb of Senmut, the architect and overseer of royal works—and ...

Anthropologists' quest to save an Alamo cannon

The Alamo, a symbol of Texas' rich history, is home to many artifacts from its storied past. Among these is a unique battle cannon that recently became the focus of an intense preservation effort led by experts from the Department ...

X-ray microCT unveils ancient pottery techniques

Researchers from Ca' Foscari University of Venice have uncovered insights into ancient pottery forming techniques using X-ray micro-computed tomography (microCT). The study, published in the Journal of Archaeological Science, ...

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Archaeology
Results from Juukan Gorge show 47,000 years of Aboriginal heritage was destroyed in mining blast
Archaeology
Archivist explores Troy's invisible workers
Archaeology
Archaeological scanners offer 2,000-year window into the world of Roman medicine
Archaeology
Plaice may have been most popular flatfish on dinner tables in medieval times
Archaeology
Did plague really decimate Neolithic farmers 5,200 years ago, as a new study suggests?
Archaeology
Croc's deadly last meal in Ancient Egypt unearthed
Archaeology
Archaeologists discover one of the earliest Christian buildings in Bahrain
Archaeology
Unveiling 1,200 years of human occupation in Canada's Arctic
Archaeology
Early Pyrenean Neolithic groups applied species selection strategies to produce bone artifacts, reveals study
Archaeology
DNA analyses show the plague may have caused the downfall of Stone Age farmers
Archaeology
Archaeologists find ancient temple and theater in Peru
Archaeology
Computational answers to riddles on stone: Advanced method for rock engraving analysis
Archaeology
Archaeologists report earliest evidence for plant farming in east Africa
Archaeology
Archaeological evidence shows centuries of intensive economic growth in Britain under Roman rule
Archaeology
Oldest living culture: Our new research shows an Indigenous ritual passed down for 500 generations
Archaeology
Evidence shows ancient Saudi Arabia had complex and thriving communities, not struggling people in a barren land
Archaeology
Ancient volcanic eruption not a catalyst for early Homo sapiens cultural innovations, researchers say
Archaeology
Bone remains indicate extinct humans survived on the Tibetan plateau for 160,000 years
Archaeology
World's oldest artwork discovered in Indonesian cave
Archaeology
New study challenges drought theory for Cahokia exodus

Other news

Astronomy
LAMOST J2354 binary hosts an unseen massive white dwarf, study suggests
Evolution
Sex chromosomes may reduce 'sexual conflict' during evolution, say researchers
Ecology
Monitoring of nature reserves via social media and deep learning
Polymers
Innovative approach for synthesizing common plastics using remote spark discharge
Plants & Animals
Discovery of ancestral diploid lineage of Betula ermanii in Japan's high mountains
Earth Sciences
Detecting nitrogen dioxide from power plants with Sentinel-2
Biotechnology
Novel siRNA backbone enhances stability, durability of oligonucleotide therapeutic platform
Plants & Animals
Streetlights running all night makes leaves so tough that insects can't eat them, threatening the food chain
Cell & Microbiology
Study analyzes potato-pathogen 'arms race' after Irish potato famine
Ecology
Researchers use vibrations from traffic to measure underground soil moisture
Other
Saturday Citations: Warp drive disasters; cancer prospects across generations; a large COVID vaccination study
Astrobiology
Scientists discuss why we might not spot solar panel technosignatures
Earth Sciences
Not the day after tomorrow: Why we can't predict the timing of climate tipping points
General Physics
Cosmic microwave background experiments could probe connection between cosmic inflation, particle physics
Optics & Photonics
New 'game-changing' discovery for light-driven artificial intelligence
Planetary Sciences
Scientists pin down the origins of the moon's tenuous atmosphere
Planetary Sciences
Massive solar wind disturbance caused Earth's magnetosphere to fly without its usual tail
Environment
More microbes found that break down the carbon-fluorine bonds found in some unsaturated PFAS
Cell & Microbiology
New compound found to be effective against 'flesh-eating' bacteria
Environment
Scientists find a human 'fingerprint' in the upper troposphere's increasing ozone

Milk enabled massive steppe migration

The long-distance migrations of early Bronze Age pastoralists in the Eurasian steppe have captured widespread interest. But the factors behind their remarkable spread have been heavily debated by archaeologists. Now, a new ...

Hand and footprint art dates to mid-Ice Age

An international collaboration has identified what may be the oldest work of art, a sequence of hand and footprints discovered on the Tibetan Plateau. The prints date back to the middle of the Pleistocene era, between 169,000 ...

Prehistoric humans rarely mated with their cousins

Today, more than 10 percent of all global marriages occur among first or second cousins. While cousin-marriages are common practice in some societies, unions between close relatives are discouraged in others. In a new study, ...