Traces of Millennia-Old Milk Help Date Pottery Fragments to Neolithic London
These dairy products are no longer edible, but they’re still valuable to researchers
Copper’s Virus-Killing Powers Were Known Even to the Ancients
The SARS-CoV-2 virus endures for days on plastic or metal but disintegrates soon after landing on copper surfaces. Here’s why
Hares and Chickens Were Revered as Gods—Not Food—in Ancient Britain
New research indicates that Iron Age Britons venerated brown hares and chickens long before modern Easter celebrations
Take a Virtual Tour of Two Recently Excavated Homes in Pompeii
Pompeii Archaeological Park Director Massimo Osanna narrates stunning drone footage of preserved daily life in the ancient city
Ornately Decorated Eggs Have Been Traded Worldwide for Thousands of Years
A new analysis of ancient ostrich eggs at the British Museum underscores the interconnectedness of the ancient world
Archaeologists Discover Paintings of Goddess in 3,000-Year-Old Mummy’s Coffin
Researchers lifted the ancient Egyptian mummy out of her coffin for the first time in 100 years and, to their surprise, uncovered the ancient artworks
The World’s Oldest Leavened Bread Is Rising Again
This is the story behind the breads you might be baking in lockdown
Ancient Volcanic Eruption Dated Through Rings of Dead Trees
Researchers compared tree rings from around the world to determine that a volcano on Santorini probably erupted in 1560 B.C.
A Comet May Have Destroyed This Paleolithic Village 12,800 Years Ago
Fragments of a comet likely hit Earth 12,800 years ago, and a little Paleolithic village in Syria might have suffered the impact
In Ancient Florida, the Calusa Built an Empire Out of Shells and Fish
New research suggests the civilization used huge enclosures to trap and stockpile live fish to support its complex society
Albert Uderzo, Co-Creator of ‘Asterix and Obelix’ Comics, Dies at 92
The pint-sized, mustachioed Gaul immortalized in the French cartoon has spawned films, a theme park and many other spin-offs
Community-Researcher Collaboration Reveals Ancient Maya Capital in Backyard
A recent excavation located the first physical evidence of the capital of the Maya kingdom of Sak Tz’i’, founded in 750 B.C.
New Analysis Refutes Nazareth Inscription’s Ties to Jesus’ Death
The marble slab appears to be Greek in origin and may have been written in response to the death of a tyrant on the island of Kos
68 Cultural, Historical and Scientific Collections You Can Explore Online
Tour world-class museums, read historic cookbooks, browse interactive maps and more
Portable, Pocket-Sized Rock Art Discovered in Ice Age Indonesian Cave
The findings further refute the outdated notion that humans’ capacity for complex artistic expression evolved exclusively in Europe
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
Newly Unearthed Mesoamerican Ball Court Offers Insights on Game’s Origins
“This could be the oldest and longest-lived team ball game in the world,” says one archaeologist
Graduate Student Discovers One of World’s Oldest Swords in Mislabeled Monastery Display
At 5,000 years old, the weapon predates the era when humans first started using tin to make bronze
Egypt’s Oldest Pyramid Reopens to Public After 14-Year Hiatus
Built nearly 4,700 years ago as a tomb for the pharaoh Djoser, the structure underwent more than a decade of on-and-off restorations
Did a Seventh-Century Warrior Queen Build the Maya’s Longest Road?
Dubbed the “white road” in honor of its limestone paving, the 62-mile path is an engineering marvel on par with Maya pyramids
Page 36 of 57