ZME Science on MSN
A Massive Stone Wall Built 7,000 Years Ago Was Found Intact Beneath the Sea Off the Coast of France
Seven thousand years ago, people living on the Atlantic edge of Europe built a massive wall of stone where land met water.
Using a specially developed simulation model, researchers at the University of Cologne have traced and analyzed the dynamics ...
This innovative approach combines climate data, archaeological evidence, and population dynamics to simulate how Neanderthals moved across the landscape. The model reveals that by the time ...
PARIS – Archaeologists say two students have found a human tooth from about 560,000 years ago in a famous prehistoric cave in southwestern France, the oldest human body part ever discovered in the ...
History Seekers on MSN
Prehistoric Fossil Hunt with a Rattlesnake Surprise!
Just when we thought the day couldn’t get any more intense, we had a close call with a rattlesnake that never made a sound. No metal detectors this time—just pure fossil-hunting success! Alongside our ...
Archaeologists from the University of Copenhagen and the University of Bergen have used AI and free digital tools to create a ...
We've ranked the most interesting archaeological finds of all time, ranging from the intricate ruins of Machu Picchu to the ...
Archaeologists in Northern Ireland went out seeking a 400-year-old castle — and ended up finding things that are much older, thanks to the little kids working with them. In an October statement, Queen ...
Between 1965 and 1989, archaeological investigations in connection with the Elk Creek Dam Project, some 60 km. north of the California border in Jackson County, Oregon, documented a record of Native ...
Tensions, pluralities, and engendering archaeology : an introduction to women and prehistory / Margaret W. Conkey and Joan M. Gero -- Gender theory and the archaeological record : why is there no ...
TAIPEI (Taiwan News) — Dining meets discovery at New Taipei’s Shihsanhang Museum of Archaeology, where a newly opened cafe ...
One look at the bulging buttocks of the squat female figurine and British Archaeologist James Mellaart recognized a Stone Age fertility symbol; the dig he was starting on a plain in southern Turkey ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results