Nabais et al. present a detailed study of the crab component of the Neanderthal diet as revealed by the evidence from the Portuguese cave site of Gru…
Chariot racing was very big business in ancient Rome. There was a whole industry built around the factions, the four professional stables known by …
Decius ruled for only two years before he was killed in a battle against the Goths. A newly found statue in Rome appears to depict a slain Roman em…
A digital reconstruction of a Giza pyramid The Egyptian pyramids erupting from the sands at Giza are a testament to human ingenuity and engineering. …
According to a new study, some of the world's first cities were completely destroyed 4,000 years ago after being exposed to a powerful combinatio…
Great Zimbabwe. Great Zimbabwe was the first major city in southern Africa, home to an estimated 18,000 people at its peak. Yet no one really knows w…
A vintage illustration from the Papyrus of Ani, which dates to the 19th dynasty of the New Kingdom of ancient Egypt, circa 1250 B.C. There aren't…
A "replica" sword that has been part of the collection at the Field Museum in Chicago for nearly a century is actually a 3,000-year-old art…
In 1713, a collection of eight gold coins of five different design types, one of which featured the unknown Roman emperor Sponsian, was found in Tran…
Neanderthal art was perhaps more abstract than the stereotypical figure and animal cave paintings Homo sapiens made after Neanderthals disappeared ab…
The mummy was garlanded with ferns and wore a gilded face mask. Incredibly detailed computed tomography (CT scans) of the so-called "Golden Bo…
The pyramids of Giza astonished researchers for many centuries with their large size, symmetry, and even their mysterious spaces and frightening room…
Analyzing fossils from a cave in Siberia, scientists have found the first known Neanderthal family: a father, his teenage daughter and others who wer…