Before the Hittites: 8,000-Year-Old Rock Art Discovered in Kayseri, Türkiye
An extraordinary archaeological discovery in Kayseri’s Develi district has revealed 8,000-year-old rock art engravings, offering new insight into how early...
5,000-Year-Old Earthquake Evidence Unearthed at Çayönü Tepesi Sheds Light on Anatolia’s Seismic Past
Archaeologists excavating the prehistoric settlement of Çayönü Tepesi, near Ergani in southeastern Türkiye, have uncovered compelling evidence of a 5,000-year-old...
Largest Excavation in 50 Years Unveils Benin City’s Hidden History and the Origins of the Legendary Benin Bronzes
In a historic archaeological effort, researchers in Benin City have uncovered long-buried traces of royal architecture, artistry, and metalworking —...
Unearthed in Perthshire: GUARD Archaeologists Discover Hidden Iron Age Settlement
A vanished community that once thrived on a windswept hilltop near Perth, Scotland, has resurfaced after lying buried for over...
Unique 9th–10th Century Chain-Mail and Helmet Unearthed at Rustavi Fortress, Georgia
Archaeologists uncover a rare medieval helmet and chain-mail shirt — the only known combat artifacts of their kind in the...
Digital Pathways to the Hittite World – AI Meets Ancient Anatolia
A groundbreaking project is opening new digital routes to the ancient world of the Hittites. Under the title “Digital Pathways...
Ix Ch’ak Ch’een Becomes the First Female Maya Sovereign Revealed to Rule Cobá
A new epigraphic breakthrough has unveiled the identity of Ix Ch’ak Ch’een, a female ruler who governed the ancient Maya...
A Rare 4th-Century BCE Celtic Brain Surgery (Trepanation) Tool Discovered in Poland
Archaeologists in Poland have made a fascinating discovery that sheds new light on Celtic presence and medical practices in ancient...
70-Million-Year-Old Giant Flying Reptile Unearthed in Syria — The Country’s First Pterosaur Fossil
A colossal flying reptile that once soared over the Cretaceous skies has been discovered in Syria — marking the first-ever...
Archaeologists Unearth First-Ever Assyrian Inscription in Jerusalem — A 2,700-Year-Old Message Between Kings
Archaeologists in Jerusalem have uncovered a discovery of extraordinary significance: a tiny, 2,700-year-old pottery fragment inscribed in Assyrian cuneiform —...
