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Ancient civilizations
01/12/2023
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By Kevin Hughes
5 Hidden ancient civilizations discovered by laser technology
In the past few years, archaeologists have used lasers to discover previously hidden ancient civilizations. This laser technology, called light detection and ranging (LiDAR), employs planes or drones to beam thousands of laser pulses from the sky to the ground below. These pulses penetrate through the thick, deep forest covering – which researchers then use to generate […]
01/11/2023
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By Kevin Hughes
Archaeologists discover ruins of Mayan civilization in Guatemala using LiDAR technology
Archaeologists have discovered the ruins of an ancient Mayan civilization that developed more than 2,000 years ago. The ruins, located in northern Guatemala, were revealed with the help of laser technology. The long-lost urban jungle was composed of almost 1,000 settlements spread out across 650 square miles. The settlements, connected by a vast causeway system, […]
01/05/2023
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By Mike Adams
CWC Labs and Mike Adams will help analyze comet impact evidence tied to the fall of civilization 12,800 years ago – an interview with Dr. Malcolm LeCompte from Comet Research Group
In an interview with Dr. Malcolm LeCompte of the Comet Research Group, I pledged microscopy and ICP-MS (mass spec) instrument time to the comet researchers to help them analyze the physical evidence left behind by the cataclysm believed to have taken place around 12,800 years ago in an event called the Younger Dryas Boundary impact. […]
09/13/2021
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By Mary Villareal
Reshaping history: Experts unearth proof that humans entered the Americas in several waves, not all at once
Humans were thought to have entered the Americas 12,000 years ago. However, the discovery of the skeletal remains of humans from 10,000 years ago challenges this theory. The skeleton was that of a woman whose skull shape was different from that of others in the same region at the same period. Experts believed that this is […]
05/28/2021
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By Virgilio Marin
Ancient “embassy” in famed Mayan city hints at two allied states turned bitter foes
Archaeologists unearthed what might be an embassy hidden in the ancient Maya city of Tikal in what is now Guatemala. Built around A.D. 300, the embassy was a sprawling courtyard that featured a pyramid, a burial site and sundry items, all of which appeared to have been informed by the artistic sensibilities of Teotihuacan, a rival city hundreds of miles away in […]
04/30/2021
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By Virgilio Marin
Ancient potsherd inscription may be the missing link in the alphabet’s history, researchers suggest
An inscription written on an ancient jar fragment may fill a significant gap in the history of the alphabet, according to a study published April 15 in the journal Antiquity. Discovered in 2018 at a dig site in Tel Lachish, Israel, the fragment dates back to around 3,450 years ago and contains letters used by people in the Levant, an […]
09/11/2020
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By Arsenio Toledo
Bible stories come to life: Archaeologists unearth extraordinary mosaic showing what might be Jesus feeding the 5,000 with 5 loaves
A team of archaeologists working at an excavation site near the Sea of Galilee in northern Israel have unearthed a 1,500-year-old mosaic that depicts the miracle of Jesus Christ Feeding the Multitude. Hippos, also known as Kinneret, is now located within Israel’s Hippos National Park. Thousands of years ago, it was once a Greco-Roman city that […]
09/10/2020
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By Arsenio Toledo
Thunderstruck: Peruvian dig uncovers Incan child sacrifice victims said to be struck by lightning
Research conducted on the practices of the ancient Inca Empire in South America found that they used to sacrifice children to their gods by placing them on top of mountains where they would die by being struck by lightning. The experts who studied this phenomenon believed that children were selected by their communities due to their […]
08/14/2020
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By Virgilio Marin
Analysis of bone collagen from Roman Britons reveal details about their diet and mortality rates
Remains of Roman Britons are known for their high nitrogen isotope ratios, which are linked to a sophisticated and abundant diet characterized mainly by seafood. But a study published in the journal Annals of Human Biology found that higher nitrogen isotope ratios, combined with carbon ratios and death rates, correspond to long periods of malnutrition and higher mortality risk. This looks […]
06/19/2020
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By Arsenio Toledo
For the Mayans, war and violence were all in a day’s work
A study by researchers from the University of California, Berkeley suggests that the ancient Maya civilization of Central America may have been more warlike than historians have previously thought. Historians used to believe that the Maya were a kind and relatively peaceful civilization and that the kind of warfare they engaged in was mostly ritualized. In particular, this was limited […]
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