News

Archaeologists uncover ancient walls in the Arabian desert, revealing Bronze Age settlements that reshaped early oasis life.
Was Ithaca truly Odysseus’ home? New discoveries have revived debate on the Homeric hero due to rich archaeological and ...
Learn about a new study that uses cemetery remains to reveal a surprising shift in the eating and migratory habits of early ...
Diet revolution: Bronze Age communities rapidly adopted drought-resistant millet as a staple crop between 1540-1480 BCE, ...
Bronze Age graves in Hungary show millet replaced meat, mobility dropped, inequality shrank, and diets changed.
The multidisciplinary research, based on the Bronze Age cemetery excavated at Tiszafüred-Majoroshalom, which was used in both the Middle Bronze Age (Füzesabony culture) and the Late Bronze Age ...
By the Late Bronze Age, these differences faded, and diets became more uniform but less nutritious. Broomcorn millet was introduced. The carbon isotope analyses found that people consumed millet.
Discover the Lost Cult of Odysseus, uncovered by archaeologists, revealing ancient rituals and insights into the legendary ...
Social relations changed: At the beginning of the Late Bronze Age, the long-time-used tell-settlements were abandoned and people lived in less centralized settlement networks.
The winning design for a national memorial in Central London to commemorate the late Queen - Britain's longest serving ...