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The exhibition comes short of grappling with the complex history of the American South, slipping instead into ...
This Mars rock is up for auction at Sotheby's in New York City this week, which is why it's currently on display in the Upper ...
China’s Terracotta Warriors Headline a Rare Archaeological Display at the Bowers Museum With more than 110 objects, the show highlights how recent archaeological finds from Emperor Qin Shi Huang ...
Meet the new bummer-screen boss: The black screen of death, minus the blue screen's frowny face.
The massive Terracotta Army of China, found in Xi'An, is one of the most famous archaeological finds in modern history. The massive collection of clay statues was forgotten and hidden from history for ...
Gayle Anderson continues her SOMETHING FOR THE SUMMER reports at the World of the Terracotta Warriors: New Archaeological Discoveries in Shaanxi in the 21st century. The new exhibition contains ...
A suspect whom authorities claim to be "mentally ill" is under investigation after allegedly damaging ancient statues at the Terracotta Army Museum in X'ian, China.
A museum visitor reportedly damaged two sculptures in the famous third-century “Terracotta Army” in the Mausoleum of the First Qin Emperor.
A tourist climbed over a fence and jumped into a section of the world-famous display of China’s Terracotta Army, damaging two ancient clay warriors, authorities said Saturday.
Tourist Damages 2,000 Year Old Terracotta Warriors The 30-year-old scaled the guardrail before taking an 18-foot leap into the restricted area.
Shocking footage has captured the moment a tourist jumped over railings at the world famous Terracotta Army display and damaged two of the ancient statues causing outrage. The man, who has been ...