Ancient Stones, New Lives: Medieval Burials at the Menga Dolmen

Ancient Stones, New Lives: Medieval Burials at the Menga Dolmen The Menga dolmen in Antequera, Spain, has long been celebrated as a masterpiece of Neolithic engineering—a colossal tomb built nearly 6,000 years ago. However, a groundbreaking study published in the Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports (2026) reveals that this UNESCO World Heritage site was far … Read more

Industrial Hub and Roman Necropolis Unearthed in Egypt’s Nile Delta

Industrial Hub and Roman Necropolis Unearthed in Egypt’s Nile Delta In a significant archaeological breakthrough, a joint Egyptian-Italian mission has uncovered an extensive industrial complex and a Roman-era cemetery in Egypt’s western Nile Delta. Excavations at the sites of Kom el-Ahmar and Kom Wasit, located in the Beheira Governorate, reveal that this region was a … Read more

9,500-Year-Old Discovery Reveals Africa’s Oldest Cremation

9,500-Year-Old Discovery Reveals Africa’s Oldest Cremation An international team of researchers has uncovered a transformative piece of history at the base of Mount Hora in northern Malawi: the oldest confirmed evidence of intentional human cremation in Africa. Dating back 9,500 years, this discovery, published in Science Advances (2026), significantly expands our understanding of Stone Age … Read more

60,000-Year-Old Arrows Reveal Earliest Use of Poison

60,000-Year-Old Arrows Reveal Earliest Use of Poison A groundbreaking study has pushed the timeline of sophisticated human weaponry back by over 50,000 years. Archaeologists analyzing quartz arrowheads from the Umhlatuzana Rock Shelter in KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa, have identified the oldest direct evidence of poisoned hunting weapons. Dating back 60,000 years, this discovery provides a rare, … Read more

3,000-Year-Old Battlefield Discovery in Lithuanian Bog

3,000-Year-Old Battlefield Discovery in Lithuanian Bog A chilling discovery in the Turlojiškė peat bog of southern Lithuania has provided compelling evidence of a violent, large-scale conflict dating back to the Late Bronze Age. Approximately 3,000 years ago, a group of young men met their end in what was then a shallow lake, their remains eventually … Read more

Elite Anglo-Saxon Cemetery Discovered Near Sizewell

Elite Anglo-Saxon Cemetery Discovered Near Sizewell Archaeologists working near the Sizewell C nuclear power project in Suffolk, England, have unearthed a rare and highly significant early medieval burial ground. Dating back to the sixth and seventh centuries, the cemetery offers a hauntingly clear window into the lives, rituals, and social hierarchies of the Anglo-Saxon elite … Read more

430,000-Year-Old Tools: Oldest Wooden Implements Ever Found

430,000-Year-Old Tools: Oldest Wooden Implements Ever Found Archaeologists working in the Megalopolis Basin of southern Greece have unveiled a discovery that fundamentally shifts our understanding of human technological evolution. Excavations at the Marathousa 1 site have revealed the oldest handheld wooden tools ever discovered, dating back approximately 430,000 years to the Middle Pleistocene. These remarkably … Read more

Ancient Innovation: Oldest Hafted Tools Found in China

Ancient Innovation: Oldest Hafted Tools Found in China A groundbreaking discovery in central China is reshaping our understanding of human technological evolution. Researchers have unearthed a collection of stone tools dating back between 160,000 and 72,000 years that feature clear evidence of “hafting”—the sophisticated process of attaching stone implements to wooden or bone handles. Published … Read more

1,900-Year-Old Roman Vial Reveals Dung-Based Medicine

1,900-Year-Old Roman Vial Reveals Dung-Based Medicine A small, nondescript glass vial—an unguentarium—recovered from an ancient tomb in Pergamon, Turkey, has provided the first definitive physical evidence of a practice long relegated to the fringes of historical debate: the use of human feces as medicine in the Roman Empire. By utilizing advanced chemical analysis, researchers have … Read more