archaeology Archive
Archaeology
Conny Waters - AncientPages.com - The dispersal patterns of early humans across continents and islands have long been the subject of intense scholarly debate. Drouseia Skloinikia, the newest
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Featured Stories
AncientPages.com - Aztec and Maya civilizations are household names – but it’s the Olmecs who are the ‘mother culture’ of ancient Mesoamerica. Jade Olmec warriors mask from Tabasco
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Archaeology
Conny Waters - AncientPages.com - An old city of Stratonikeia Stratonicea) has rich historical records going back 3,000 years. The council building at the ancient city of Stratonicea,
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Archaeology
Conny Waters - AncientPages.com - In 2015, Gkuthaarn and Kukatj community members of Queensland's Gulf Country invited us to excavate, analyze, and rebury the skeletal remains of eight
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Featured Stories
AncientPages.com - In evolutionary terms, the human population has rocketed in seconds. The news that it has now reached 8 billion seems inexplicable when you think about our
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Archaeology
Conny Waters - AncientPages.com - Humans have the highest prenatal growth rate of all extant primates, but how this exceptional rate came about has been a mystery up
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Archaeology
Conny Waters - AncientPages.com - Archaeologists have been continuously involved in excavations in the ancient city of Assos for 42 years. Assos ancient site has much to offer.
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Archaeology
Conny Waters - AncientPages.com - The archaeological site of the 8850-year-old Ulucak Mound, located in the Kemalpaşa district of the western province of Izmir, Turkey, has been excavated
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Featured Stories
AncientPages.com - That the arrival of Europeans in the New World in 1492 led to a massive shift in the ecological landscape has been widely accepted for the
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Archaeology
Conny Waters - AncientPages.com - The human middle ear—which houses three tiny, vibrating bones—is key to transporting sound vibrations into the inner ear, where they become nerve impulses
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Archaeology
Conny Waters - AncientPages.com - Already in the Bronze Age, pastoralists covered long distances across the Eurasian steppes - presumably thanks to their consumption of milk. The Yamnaya,
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Archaeology
Conny Waters - AncientPages.com - The Middle East region is important to understand human evolution and migrations but is underrepresented in genomic studies. Whole-genome sequencing efforts around the
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Archaeology
Conny Waters - AncientPages.com - Researchers analyzed human tissues of 29 individuals (26 urn cremations and 3 inhumations) from Szigetszentmiklós-Ürgehegy, one of the largest Middle Bronze Age urn
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Archaeology
Conny Waters - AncientPages.com - Researchers have identified remains of a new, previously unknown type of 'Homo' who lived in the region at the Nesher Ramla site side
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Archaeology
Conny Waters - AncientPages.com - A new study conducted on pottery items uncovered in the Tomb of the Patriarchs in Hebron suggests the cave was used and visited
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Archaeology
AncientPages.com - A team of archaeologists led by professor Rubina Raja at Aarhus University, Denmark, have used CT scanning and advanced 3D-modelling to virtually 'unfold' the silver plate
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Archaeology
AncientPages.com - British Museum presents a Viking Hoard dating from the time of the ‘Last Kingdom’, when the Anglo-Saxon kingdoms of Mercia and Wessex were fighting for their survival against
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