archaeology

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Drusas, in Archaeologists Unearth Archive of Ancient City of Doliche, Founded in 300 B.C., Revealing Over 2,000 Clay Seals

That's article's got some weird italicization.

acockworkorange, in More than 3,000 Roman coins and gems unearthed at 'magical place' in northern Italy

Tomorrow on CNN: “scientists confirm magic is real. Money and gems at the end of the rainbow. More at 9.”

looseanus, in 4,000-year-old tomb discovered in Norway may contain region's 1st farmers
vzq, in Beaver exploitation, 400,000 years ago, testifies to prey choice diversity of Middle Pleistocene hominins

The modern shoreline is for reference. It looked wildly different then.

eran_morad, in Copper Age woman survived two skull surgeries up to 4,500 years ago

Bruv, that sounds fucking brutal.

Muddbiker, in Copper Age woman survived two skull surgeries up to 4,500 years ago

Collections can finally stop looking for her…

acockworkorange, in Looters continue to pillage Afghanistan’s rich archaeological heritage

I’m on the fence. Remember when ISIS was bombing historical places for being heretic?

If they pillage it, at least there’s a chance of preservation somewhere.

DavidGarcia, in Looters continue to pillage Afghanistan’s rich archaeological heritage

I hope it’s worth the levels

No_Eponym, in Skeleton with 4 prosthetic metal fingers unearthed from centuries-old grave in Germany
@No_Eponym@lemmy.ca avatar

They say the first thing that goes when you lose your hands are your fine motor skillshttps://lemmy.ca/pictrs/image/c157b669-9ece-41a1-8ac6-e74500857158.jpeg

Risk, in Larger-scale warfare may have occurred in Europe 1,000 years earlier than previously thought

Ah, humans. We never change, do we?

^^^^^dammit.

Fascinating article. Thanks for sharing.

nieceandtows, in Did Ancient Egyptians Know Meteorites Came From Space?

Is that really that hard to understand? Somebody sees a fireball falling from the sky. They investigate it, and it turns out to be a very strong material, great for making weapons with. It wasn’t as obvious to the British in 19th century, because iron is most commonly mined everywhere. Since there was no iron mining back when they first started using it, they had no confusion realizing it came from the sky.

malamignasanmig, in How Asia’s first nomadic empire broke the rules of imperial expansion

fascinating.

this makes me think of Austronesian speakers from Taiwan who spread to the Philippines and throughout Oceania and even Madagascar. their initial movement to the Philippines - was that a single large empire who made the dominant migration or was it a consistent movement by smaller groups of people whose only commonality is their shared ancestry to Taiwanese Austronesian speakers?

activ8r, in Cannibalism was a common funerary rite in northwest Europe near end of last ice age

Damn Irish.

sik0fewl, in Cannibalism was a common funerary rite in northwest Europe near end of last ice age

Mmm, tastes like kuru.

Kittybeer, in More Than 10,000 Indigenous Earthworks Hidden in the Amazon Reveal Human Connections to the Forest Over Millennia

Graham Hancock goes into great detail about this in his newest book, America Before.

RicoBerto,

Graham Hancock is a hack.

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