4h
Live Science on MSNCroesus stater: The 2,500-year-old coin that introduced the gold standardIn the middle of the sixth century B.C., King Croesus of Lydia minted the world's first gold coin. Known as a stater or ...
After the discovery of a long-lost pharaoh's tomb was revealed last week, archaeologists may have unearthed another ...
Archaeologists from Grampus Heritage & Training Limited uncovered the largest Viking Age timber building ever found in ...
German officials recently announced the excavation of Marienkirche in Gardelegen, which yielded unusual artifacts including ...
The discoveries shed a fascinating light on naval warfare, trade, and daily life around the Baltic Sea in the late 15th ...
4h
Interesting Engineering on MSNSuper rare 14th-century gigantic sword found in Poland by amateur archaeologistsA group of amateur treasure seekers in Poland uncovered a giant two-handed sword from the Middle Ages alongside two axes.
2d
Hosted on MSNArchaeology breakthrough as experts hail find of 2,000-year-old decapitated remains in bogAncient human remains discovered in a Co Derry bog have been identified as belonging to a young woman from the Iron Age, not ...
A sudden loss of jobs at the National Park Service has some terminated archaeologists rethinking a life of public service.
The huge archaeology breakthrough is thought to be the tomb of Tutankhamun's ancestor, Thutmose II, who died 3,500 years ago ...
4d
Live Science on MSN2,000-year-old spoon from Isle of Man may have been used in blood rituals for fortune tellingA mysterious bronze spoon unearthed on the Isle of Man is rare evidence of ancient ritual in Europe.
In the past 30 years, they’ve been helped in these studies by digital tools like geographic information systems (GIS). GIS is ...
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