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01/13/2023
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By Kevin Hughes
Amateur archaeologist decodes messages hidden in cave art inscriptions
An amateur archaeologist has deciphered what experts dubbed as “the first known writing in the history of Homo sapiens.” British newspaper the Times reported that 67-year-old furniture restorer Ben Bacon has spent his nights examining photographs of cave paintings. In the course of his examination, Bacon managed to decipher code inscriptions that appear in at least […]
09/13/2021
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By Mary Villareal
Ancient and green: Study suggests billion-year-old green algae is the ancestor of all plants on the planet
Scientists discovered fossils of what may now be considered to be the oldest green algae known to science. The seaweed, named Proterocladus antiquus, was said to have lived about a billion years ago. Despite its size (about 2 millimeters in length), the algae had a big role: it was able to produce oxygen through photosynthesis, possibly making […]
10/30/2020
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By Virgilio Marin
Recent study reveals ancient text found in 2012 is the “oldest map of the underworld in existence”
Archaeologists from Belgium have uncovered the remains of what may be the world’s oldest known copy of the “Book of Two Ways” – a spiritual map to the Egyptian underworld. In 2012, a team of archaeologists led by Egyptologist Harco Willems of the University of Leuven in Belgium, excavated a burial shaft in the village of Dayr al-Barsha?, midway […]
09/14/2020
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By Virgilio Marin
Ancient Chinese texts may be the oldest surviving anatomical atlas, study finds
A series of ancient Chinese texts more than two millennia old are the world’s earliest surviving anatomical atlas, claims a study published in the Anatomical Record. The texts were unearthed in the 1970s in the Mawangdui burial site, where Marquis Dai, his wife Lady Dai and their son were entombed. Researchers from Bangor University in Wales and […]
09/04/2020
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By Michael Alexander
An ancient beauty: Experts recreate the face of a Neolithic woman using a 7,500-year-old skull
A Neolithic woman, whose skull was first discovered in 1996 within a cave in Gibraltar, has been brought back to life – in the form of a sculpture. The woman, named Calpeia by experts as an homage to the rock’s classical name, is thought to have been between 30 and 40 years old when she […]
08/28/2020
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By Virgilio Marin
Archaeologists may have found the ruins of the biblical village Bethsaida
Archaeologists have discovered evidence that may prove the existence of Bethsaida, the biblical village where Jesus performed many miracles. The village lies today in ruins, over a mile from the Sea of Galilee, said the researchers. The team started looking for Bethsaida’s ruins more than 32 years ago. During this time, a few theories for the whereabouts […]
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 […]
06/05/2020
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By Michael Alexander
Elongated skulls unearthed in ancient Chinese tombs may indicate social status, researchers say… is there another explanation?
Human skeletons unearthed in northeast China represent some of the earliest evidence of intentional skull reshaping, says a recent study in the American Journal of Physical Anthropology. Between 2011 and 2015, the dig at the Houtaomuga site yielded 11 modified skulls and 14 skeletons with unmodified craniums. The former, in particular, had artificially elongated braincases and flattened bones […]
03/07/2020
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By Arsenio Toledo
Prehistoric site described as “real-life Atlantis” – experts in a race against time to retrieve treasures before it disappears again
In the site known as Ala-Tei in the Tuva Republic, in Russia, scientists are racing against time to retrieve dozens of treasures from over 110 burial sites — all of which are thousands of years old. The Tuva Republic, one of the federal subjects of the Russian Federation, sits in the so-called Sayan Sea, an artificial reservoir created when the Sayano-Shushenskaya […]
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