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Did child labor fuel the ancient pottery industry?

Archaeologists from Tel Aviv University and the National Museum in Copenhagen have analyzed 450 pottery vessels made in Tel Hama, a town at the edge of the Ebla Kingdom, one of the most important Syrian kingdoms in the Early ...

Archaeologists discover Armenia's oldest church

Archaeologists from the National Academy of Sciences of Armenia and the University of Münster have discovered the remains of a previously unknown early Christian church in the ancient city of Artaxata. The find consists ...

Archive tells of cracking ancient Greek language

A retired Classics professor from Texas has donated a collection of papers to the University of Cincinnati detailing the deciphering of an ancient Greek language that baffled generations of scholars.

Sacrificial burial confirms Scythians' eastern origins

Archaeologists have uncovered evidence for sacrificial funerary rituals at the Early Iron Age burial mound of Tunnug 1 in Tuva, Siberia, indicating that the horse-riding Scythian culture, best-known from Eastern Europe, originated ...

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Archaeology
Archaeologists use metabolites in bones to identify smokers from centuries ago
Archaeology
Archaeologists shed light on the Tartessos culture's sustainable construction skills
Archaeology
Centuries ago, the Maya storm god Huracán taught that when we damage nature, we damage ourselves
Archaeology
Accept our king, our god, or else: The senseless 'requirement' Spanish colonizers used
Archaeology
Archaeologists develop system to produce unique names for Stone Age skeletons and mummies
Archaeology
The Indigenous artists keeping ancient rock art traditions alive
Archaeology
Retracing walrus ivory trade of Viking Age reveals early interactions between Europeans and Indigenous North Americans
Archaeology
Unexpected discovery of early sweet potato cultivation in Polynesia
Archaeology
How old is beer?
Archaeology
Twice as many women as men were buried in the megalithic necropolis of Panoría, study reveals
Archaeology
Archaeologists use AI to find hundreds of geoglyphs in Peru's Nazca Desert
Archaeology
Archaeologists discover southern army fought at 'Europe's oldest battle'
Archaeology
1,000-year-old textiles reveal cultural resilience in the ancient Andes
Archaeology
DNA analysis identifies senior officer from Franklin's ill-fated 1845 expedition
Archaeology
Studying fossil extraction on Native lands and exploring the depths of untold histories
Archaeology
Enigmatic archaeological site in Madagascar may have been built by people with Zoroastrian origins, research suggests
Archaeology
Previously unknown Neolithic society in Morocco discovered: North Africa's role in Mediterranean prehistory
Archaeology
Scientists explore origins of horseback riding through human skeletons
Archaeology
Researchers decode oldest human DNA from South Africa to date
Archaeology
10,000-year-old human DNA provides insights into South African population history

Other news

Astronomy
Dutch students warn space mission of noisy white dwarfs
General Physics
First coherent picture of an atomic nucleus made of quarks and gluons
Astronomy
Researchers claim to have found the oldest stellar disk in the Milky Way galaxy
Earth Sciences
Study finds asymmetric warming impacts soil carbon storage more than symmetric warming
Astronomy
Astronomers detect very-high-energy gamma-ray emission surrounding distant pulsar
Evolution
Ancient hominins had humanlike hands, indicating earlier tool use, study reveals
Quantum Physics
Dual-species atomic arrays show promise for quantum error correction
Political science
Model reveals why debunking election misinformation often doesn't work
Optics & Photonics
Janus-like metasurface technology shows different optical responses according to the direction of light
Plasma Physics
In a fusion device plasma, a steep ion temperature gradient slows the growth of magnetic islands
Cell & Microbiology
Targeting bacteria: Auxiliary metabolic genes expand understanding of phages and their reprogramming strategy
Optics & Photonics
Enhanced wavelength conversion paves the way for more efficient quantum information transfer
Bio & Medicine
Nano-nutrients can blunt effects of soil contamination, boost crop yields
Plants & Animals
The monarch butterfly may not be endangered, but research suggests its migration is
Biotechnology
Novel sensors could help develop bee-friendly protection for plants
Condensed Matter
Researchers unveil pressure-tuned superconductivity in natural bulk heterostructure 6R-TaS₂
Plants & Animals
New method enables real-time visualization of chick embryo development from egg to chick
Social Sciences
The flirting paradox: Why the attention your partner receives from others is liable to diminish your desire for them
Cell & Microbiology
Enhancers study provides insight into how gene expression establishes and maintains naive-state pluripotent stem cells
Plants & Animals
Male mice use female mice to distract aggressors and avoid conflict, study shows

Egypt bets on ancient finds to pull tourism out of pandemic

Workers dig and ferry wheelbarrows laden with sand to open a new shaft at a bustling archaeological site outside of Cairo, while a handful of Egyptian archaeologists supervise from garden chairs. The dig is at the foot of ...

Researchers unearth oldest gold find in southwest Germany

rchaeologists working in the district of Tübingen in southwest Germany have discovered the region's earliest gold object to date. It is a spiral ring of gold wire unearthed in autumn 2020 from the grave of an Early Bronze ...

Tiny tools point to specialist skills of ancient Indonesians

New research has questioned theories that a mysterious group of hunter-gatherers from Indonesia interacted with Aboriginal Australians thousands of years ago and provides a basis for future understanding of the people who ...

Stone age desert kites found in southern Africa

A team of researchers with the University of Johannesburg's Palaeo-Research Institute has found multiple instances of desert kites in a part of South Africa. In their paper published in the journal Archaeological and Anthropological ...

Turning an archaeological practice on its head

Archaeologists often spend a career studying a single site, region, or time period, building on the field's previous research and interpretations. But some, like Penn's Megan Kassabaum, take a wider view that spans both time ...