No Mortar, No Cement, No Metal – How Sardinia’s Nuragic Towers Have Defied Gravity for 3,500 Years?
No mortar, cement, or metal—yet Sardinia’s Nuragic towers have stood for 3,500 years. New scientific research reveals the ancient engineering...
Ancient Marble Mystery: Rare 2,500-Year-Old Greek Sculpture Unearthed in Etruscan Heartland
A remarkable archaeological discovery by teams from the University of Freiburg and Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz is reshaping our understanding...
Ancient Anchorage and Three Shipwrecks Discovered off Fethiye Reveal 4,000 Years of Maritime Traffic
A sweeping underwater survey along the eastern shores of Fethiye in southwestern Türkiye has uncovered an ancient anchorage used continuously...
Rare 4th-Century BC Marble Mask of a Phoenician Woman Unearthed in Carthage
Archaeologists in Tunisia have uncovered a marble mask depicting a woman with a Phoenician-style coiffure, described as “unique in form...
Sicilian Seas Yield Rare Roman Helmet from 241 BC Naval Clash
In a remarkable underwater archaeological recovery that highlights Sicily’s rich cultural heritage, a bronze Montefortino‐type helmet was retrieved from the...
Tipasa’s Underwater Secrets: Algeria’s Hunt for a Lost Ancient City
Algeria has launched a new underwater archaeological campaign off the coast of Tipasa, a UNESCO World Heritage Site celebrated for...
World’s Oldest Evidence of Wick Use Discovered in 4,000-Year-Old Lamps in Israel
Archaeologists in Israel have uncovered one of the oldest known pieces of evidence for wick use in the world—4,000-year-old textile...
Ancient Eco-Tech Uncovered in Lebanon: Phoenicians Used Recycled Pottery for Hydraulic Lime Plaster 2,700 Years Ago
Excavations at Tell el-Burak Reveal Technological Innovation and Early Sustainable Construction in Iron Age Lebanon In a major archaeological breakthrough,...
“No Easy Way from Earth to the Stars”: Malta’s Prehistoric Temples (3800–2400 BCE) May Have Served as Celestial Navigation Schools
A new open-access study published in Archaeological and Anthropological Sciences has reignited the debate surrounding the purpose and cosmic alignment...
Ancient Roman Fast Food: Songbirds Were a Popular Snack in 1st-Century Mallorca
Roman fast food, ancient Roman cuisine, song thrush consumption, Roman street food, Mallorca archaeology, Pollentia findings, Roman bird bones, ancient...
