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.
"It's like a city frozen in time," said archaeologist Pedro Guillermo Ramón Celis of Canada's McGill University.
Recent scientific reevaluations of remains have historians rethinking the prevalence of women fighters throughout history.
Researchers have found the oldest known evidence of lead pollution dating to around 5,200 years ago in ancient Greece ...
The museum conjoins an actual excavated site, where one can see the remains of a 2,500-year-old ancient town. To keep ...
And few fossils capture our imagination quite like those of the dinosaurs who lived millions of years ago. This interactive ...
A metal detectorist has found a unique 1,600-year-old tiny Roman padlock in Germany, shedding light on miniature ...
The Cleo Redd Fisher Museum’s Speaker Series resumes this month with Ohio’s top archaeologist joining the museum on Monday, ...
Colin Renfrew played a key part in transforming archaeology into a problem-oriented, theoretically explicit and ...
The remains of the deceased found in the burials may be more than 2,000 years old, according to archaeologists.
Hundreds of Roman-era gold and silver coins were found in a field outside a village in the Netherlands, officials announced ...