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Shakespeare's 'missing' London house mapped with new discovery

The exact location of William Shakespeare's only London property can now be pinpointed to a quiet Blackfriars street, thanks to the discovery of a previously unknown floorplan. The discovery, made by Shakespeare expert Professor ...

New tools rescue old art at Madrid's Prado museum

In a quiet space secluded from the throngs of daily visitors to Madrid's Prado art museum, a team of experts perpetuate an ancient tradition of restoring centuries-old European cultural treasures.

A matter of taste: Did Neanderthals really like sapiens women?

Going by the headlines, the matter seems to be settled. El País announces that Neanderthal men "chose" sapiens women. Science journal speaks of a "partner preference." National Geographic is already imagining the "Romeos" ...

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Archaeology
Study challenges a site that's key to how humans got to the Americas
Archaeology
Archaeological survey at Gnith reveals new details about pearl millet's westward expansion
Archaeology
Rare Roman paint 'recipe' uncovered in Cartagena murals makes smart use of costly cinnabar
Archaeology
No more giants, no more heavy handaxes: Why early humans downsized their stone tools
Archaeology
Ancient Māori remains point to largely plant-based diets before colonization
Archaeology
Unique double baptistery and mysterious marble block uncovered at Byzantine cathedral in Israel
Archaeology
Ancient Romans were obsessed with a plant said to be a contraception and an aphrodisiac. Then one day, it went extinct
Archaeology
DNA evidence reveals a Stone Age population collapse in France
Archaeology
Giant jars, ancient bells, buried bones and a mystery that endures
Archaeology
Neanderthals in Central Europe hunted pond turtles—not for food, but likely for their shells
Archaeology
Seal tooth pendant reveals ancient human culture and long-distance trading
Archaeology
Ancient architecture shows public opinion influenced Maya divine kings
Archaeology
Early humans in South Africa were quarrying stone as far back as 220,000 years ago
Archaeology
Who got the meat? What 10,000 years of European bones suggest about diet inequality
Archaeology
How to eat an elephant: Fossil find in Tanzania shows oldest signs of butchering these giant mammals
Archaeology
How an eye physician who translated classical Greek medicine into Arabic helped form Western medical thought
Archaeology
Scientists discover a 1,200-year-old Fijian island likely built from discarded shellfish remains
Archaeology
New evidence challenges assumptions of mass feasting at ancient Mongolian burial mounds
Archaeology
Native Americans were making dice, gambling, exploring probability millennia before their Old World counterparts
Archaeology
Archival records reveal prevalence of sexually transmitted infections during Otago's gold rush less than purported

Other news

Social Sciences
People with dark personality traits are naturally inclined towards leadership roles, finds new study
Mathematics
Mental math's shortcut—pupil dilation suggests people start solving before all numbers are in
Astronomy
DESI completes planned 3D map of the universe and continues exploring
Condensed Matter
Surprising link between metallicity and superconductivity uncovered in twisted trilayer graphene
Plants & Animals
How poison frogs built a chemical weapons system one evolutionary step at a time
Quantum Physics
Universal quantum protocol extracts maximum work without knowing a system's state in advance
Plants & Animals
Raven personalities shape survival as human pressure grows at the Dead Sea
Education
Prenatal opioid exposure in babies doesn't predict future classroom performance, study finds
Other
Saturday Citations: Neuroinflammaging treatment stuns; a hidden magma lake; decoding little red dots
Optics & Photonics
Bright quantum light emission achieved at room temperature in 2D semiconductors
Optics & Photonics
Flat optics move toward market with 300-per-second metalens production
Earth Sciences
Earth's tectonic elevator hauls ancient buried microbes back to the seafloor to revive and spread
Ecology
PFAS detected in dolphin milk may pass from mothers to calves
Earth Sciences
Taiwan landslide's hidden motion comes into focus as fiber optics track deep slip
Environment
Wildfires used to 'go to sleep' at night. Climate change is turning them into prime burning hours
Astronomy
A student-led experiment sets new limits in the search for axions
Soft Matter
Quantum-informed AI improves long-term turbulence forecasts while using far less memory
Earth Sciences
The Colorado River disappeared from the geological record for 5 million years: Scientists now know where it went
Plants & Animals
DNA cracks nutmeg's hidden past, revealing a South Moluccas origin and a prehuman journey north
Earth Sciences
Indonesia's fire crisis comes into focus as high-resolution satellite maps expose 5.62 million hectares affected

How water and clay shape the archaeological record at Murujuga

New research has shown that water movement in clay-rich soils can lift stone artifacts toward the surface—exerting a natural influence on how archaeological materials are distributed across the surface of some landscapes.

Roman urbanism was bad for health, new study confirms

Analysis of skeletal remains from England before and during Roman occupation confirms theories that the population's health declined under Roman occupation, but only in the urban centers, suggesting pre-Roman traditions continued ...