According to a statement released by the University of Bergen, fragments of the 4,000-year-old skull of a young child have ...
Ahram Online reports that remnants of a fortified city inhabited in the fourth century A.D. have been uncovered at the Ain El ...
Families, history lovers and budding archaeologists are invited to uncover the past this summer as Clitheroe Castle Museum ...
Historians have long believed that a Roman-era bridge must have spanned the Aare River in Switzerland, but they could never ...
In 218 BC, the Carthaginian general Hannibal Barca achieved one of military history's most extraordinary feats - leading an ...
The Île-de-France Prehistory Museum in Nemours opens its doors to archaeology enthusiasts for Heritage Days this Sunday, ...
This weekend, a month long festival kicks off in the Ribble Valley offering the “opportunity for people of all ages to ...
Archaeologists say the iron cannonball was likely fired during the 1836 Battle of the Alamo and remained undisturbed where it ...
For 1,600 years, a once-thriving frontier settlement lay buried beneath Egypt's western desert. Once governed by Byzantine ...
Sri Lanka, July 7 -- The National Archaeology Conference, organised by the Archaeology Department to coincide with the 136th Archaeology Day, is being held at the Sri Lanka Foundation Institute on ...
Archaeologists have excavated a royal burial ground of the Piceni, a mysterious pre-Roman civilization in Italy that is not well-known historically.
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Ancient Architects Official on MSNOpinion

Why 10 women and children died at Germany's 2300 BC wooden henge

At Pömmelte in Germany, archaeologists found 29 shafts containing dismembered skeletons of women and children, some with fractured skulls and bound hands, inside a wooden monument dating to 2300 BC.