What Today’s Indigenous Potters Are Learning from Ancient Chocolate-Drinking Jars
Cacao harvested from Mesoamerican forests was traded through a massive network to reach people in the Southwest
A Submerged 7,000-Year-Old Discovery Shows the Great Potential of Underwater Archaeology
Stone tools scattered on the seafloor mark the oldest underwater site ever found on the continent
The Maya Ruins at Uxmal Still Have More Stories to Tell
The remains of a provincial capital on the Yucatan Peninsula attest to a people trying to fortify their place in the world
Inside the Incredible Effort to Recreate Historic Jewish Sites Destroyed Years Ago
The digital venture, called Diarna, takes you back to painstakingly revived synagogues and destinations once lost to history
Was Philip of Macedon Even Greater Than His Son Alexander?
Archaeologists in Greece are showing how the murdered king paved the way for his scion to become a legend
Text Found on Supposedly Blank Dead Sea Scroll Fragments
Invisible to the naked eye, researchers revealed lines of ancient script in new photographs
Treasure Trove of Artifacts Illustrates Life in a Lost Viking Mountain Pass
Lendbreen, a pass high in the Norwegian mountains, was an important route from the Roman era until the late Middle Ages
In Groundbreaking Find, Three Kinds of Early Humans Unearthed Living Together in South Africa
The different hominid species, possibly including the oldest-known Homo erectus, existed in the region’s hills and caves
A Mysterious 25,000-Year-Old Structure Built of the Bones of 60 Mammoths
The purpose of such an elaborate structure remains a big open question
Divers Recover More Than 350 Artifacts From the HMS ‘Erebus’ Shipwreck
The treasure trove could help answer questions about what happened during the disastrous Franklin Expedition
Angkor Wat May Owe Its Existence to an Engineering Catastrophe
The collapse of a reservoir in a remote and mysterious city could have helped Angkor gain supremacy
The Best Board Games of the Ancient World
Thousands of years before Monopoly, people were playing games like Senet, Patolli and Chaturanga
To Craft Cutting Tools, Neanderthals Dove for Clam Shells on the Ocean Floor
Clam shell knives from a cave on the Italian coast suggest Neanderthals dove underwater for resources
Twelve Fascinating Finds Revealed in 2019
The list includes a sorceress’ kit, a forgotten settlement, a Renaissance masterpiece and a 1,700-year-old egg
Archaeologists Are Unearthing the Stories of the Past Faster Than Ever Before
Recent research helps reveal the origins of humans, determine what ancient people ate and monitor historical sites from the sky
Oldest Known Seawall Discovered Along Submerged Mediterranean Villages
Archaeologists believe the 7,000-year-old structure was intended to protect settlements as sea levels rose
The Story of How Humans Came to the Americas Is Constantly Evolving
Surprising new clues point to the arrival taking place thousands of years earlier than previously believed
Human Genome Recovered From 5,700-Year-Old Chewing Gum
The piece of Birch tar, found in Denmark, also contained the mouth microbes of its ancient chewer, as well as remnants of food to reveal what she ate
Church Unearthed in Ethiopia Rewrites the History of Christianity in Africa
Archaeologists now can more closely date when the religion spread to the Aksumite Empire
Archaeologists Race to Preserve Artifacts as the Ice Melts in Mongolia
Disappearing patches of ice unleash new artifacts for discovery, but many could quickly degrade exposed to the elements
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