Archaeologists have uncovered the remains of a "unique" prehistoric ceremonial site in southern Sweden that dates back to the Neolithic period, or New Stone Age. The unusual site, located in the ...
Archaeologists have discovered an "extremely rare and unusual" ancient stone amulet in Jerusalem that could change our understanding on the prevalence of reading and writing in antiquity. Emil Aladjem ...
Archaeologists have discovered six of the world's oldest stone needles while carrying out excavations near the shore of Lake Xiada Co in western Tibet. Knewz.com has learned that unusual stone ...
Archaeologists in Hammar uncovered a “unique” Neolithic site where pottery, flint and bone artifacts were left as offerings, photos show. Photo from Arkeologerna and Sweden’s National Historical ...
While exploring a cave in Germany, archaeologists discovered a rare trove of ancient artifacts and remains left by prehistoric humans — and cave bears. Officials said more than 10,000 animal bones and ...
The woman picked up what looked like an unusual stone, but turned out to be a rare ancient relic. A flint axe from around 2500 B.C.E. was discovered by a grandmother in Poland. Photo courtesy of ...
26,831 people played the daily Crossword recently. Can you solve it faster than others?26,831 people played the daily Crossword recently. Can you solve it faster than others?
Ben Witten found an unusual rock on an English beach when he was 6. It turned out to be an exceedingly rare hand ax made by Neanderthals, tens of thousands of years ago. A few years ago, a 6-year-old ...
Archaeologists found artifacts, dated between 9650 and 4900 BC, associated with the production of arrowheads. Photo by LWL/C. Hentzelt A group of amateur archaeologists made a surprising Neolithic ...
The tiny cuts and grooves that decorate some ancient human artifacts are not just pretty accidents, according to some archaeologists. They could be early signs of creativity and symbolic thinking in ...
Israeli archaeologists discover 'extremely rare and unusual' artifact The Israeli Antiquities Authority touts the value of a stone ring from the era of the First Temple, roughly the 7th or 8th BCE.