Last update:

More news

Archaeology
Study uncovers mercury treatment in 19th-century French child suffering from rickets and scurvy
Archaeology
New computer model reveals how Bronze Age Scandinavians could have crossed the sea
Archaeology
First ancient genomes from the Green Sahara deciphered
Archaeology
Ancient tombs in Anatolia suggest reverence for youth preceded elite burials
Archaeology
Stone tool discovery shows people in East Asia were innovating during the Middle Paleolithic
Archaeology
New study challenges the story of humanity's shift from prehistoric hunting to farming
Archaeology
Discovery of Quina technology challenges view of ancient human development in East Asia
Archaeology
Why children may have taken part in creating prehistoric cave art
Archaeology
Ottoman Empire's religious 'tolerance' was another form of control, findings suggest
Archaeology
Melsonby hoard: Iron-Age Yorkshire discovery reveals ancient Britons' connections with Europe
Archaeology
Fitting the 'missing puzzle pieces'—research sheds light on the deep history of social change in West Papua
Archaeology
Even the common people drank wine in Troy
Archaeology
The hidden hand of medieval female scribes
Archaeology
Digital cuneiforms: Updated tool expands access to ancient Hittite texts
Archaeology
Skeletal analysis in Tombos tombs finds hardworking individuals buried among the elite
Archaeology
Nescot dog remains provide insight into Romano-British ritual practices
Archaeology
How ancient stone kitchens preserve food secrets
Archaeology
Radical study of medieval warhorses unveiled in new book
Archaeology
Decoding a medieval mystery manuscript
Archaeology
Historical robber 'Schinderhannes' clearly identified: Skeletons were mixed up about 220 years ago

Other news

General Physics
New experiment halves weight limit of elusive neutrinos
Quantum Physics
A new approach to probe hadronization via quantum entanglement
Materials Science
Transparent paper-based material can hold boiling water and degrade in deep ocean in under a year
Plants & Animals
First new plant tissue discovered in 160 years boosts crop yields
Astronomy
Energy densities offer new path to resolving the Hubble tension
General Physics
Einstein's dream of a unified field theory accomplished?
Astrobiology
Q&A: How to (theoretically) spot an alien
Ecology
Global fisheries' nutrient extraction threatens ocean ecosystems and productivity, study finds
Biochemistry
Study provides scaffold to selectively target drug breakdown process
Biotechnology
Improved method for producing designer proteins prevents misfolding
Evolution
Strategic gene placement in bacteria offers insights into evolutionary success
Ecology
Hantavirus hotspots revealed: Six new rodent species identified as carriers
Quantum Physics
Simulating quantum magnetism with a digital quantum computer
Astronomy
X-ray binary 4U 1907+09: NuSTAR observations reveal flux variability and spin-down
Planetary Sciences
Rock diversity along rim of Jezero Crater offers a wide glimpse of Martian history
Superconductivity
New AI tool set to speed quest for advanced superconductors
Astronomy
Webb's autopsy of planet swallowed by star yields surprise
Cell & Microbiology
Researchers discover large dormant virus can be reactivated in model green alga
Ecology
Venom characteristics of a deadly snake can be predicted from local climate
Cell & Microbiology
A new tool for parsing the 'metabolic dialogue' between microorganisms

Unearthing the secrets of an ancient Greek city

The ancient city of Teos sits on the western coast of Türkiye, directly across the Aegean Sea from Athens. Today, it is rubble and ruins, but 2,000 years ago, it was a thriving center of Hellenistic and Roman art, culture, ...

Discovery of first Bronze Age settlement in the Maghreb

Most Bronze Age settlements have been documented in European territory. Despite its geographical proximity, the Maghreb has always been absent from these historical narratives, erroneously characterized as an "empty land" ...

Researcher uncovers hidden copy of Shakespeare sonnet

Dr. Leah Veronese from Oxford University's English Faculty has unearthed a rare manuscript copy of Shakespeare's famous Sonnet 116 tucked away in a 17th-century poetry collection. This treasure was found among the papers ...

Vesuvian ash cloud suspected of turning brain to glass

A unique dark-colored organic glass, found inside the skull of an individual who died in Herculaneum during the 79 CE Mount Vesuvius eruption, likely formed when they were killed by a very hot but short-lived ash cloud. The ...