The remains of the deceased found in the burials may be more than 2,000 years old, according to archaeologists.
Archaeologists working on the site of an old convent’s garden in Dijon, France, have discovered a strange group of Gallic graves and a children’s necropolis dating back over 2,000 years.
Archaeologists in Luxembourg have unearthed a stash of Roman gold coins dating back some 1,600 years. The coins are marked ...
Archaeologists have traced the earliest case of lead pollution by humans to the Aegean Sea region around 5,200 years ago. The findings, published in the journal Communications Earth & Environment, ...
Just why the Romans did this, though, remains a mystery. The experts that made the discovery found that the natural ...
An underground tunnel network long rumored thanks to drawings by Leonardo da Vinci under Milan’s Sforza Castle are proven to ...
The lentil-shaped objects were unearthed in Hadrianopolis, an ancient city in modern-day Turkey, that once hosted a Roman ...
Archaeologists uncovered a boundary stone, used to mark land borders during the Roman Empire, dated to a period during which ...
The archaeologists unearthed two tubs that, among other things, were used to process the colorful pigments while the palace ...
Scientists have deciphered a Roman boundary stone inscribed with Greek text which was recently discovered in northern Israel, ...
Archaeologists pinpoint the site of King Harold’s elite residence, depicted in the Bayeux Tapestry, using a surprising clue: ...
Everything was functional to the staging of a ‘show’ at the center of which was the owner himself,” said the archaeological ...