Ancient rock art in Saudi Arabia reveals human settlement 12,800 years ago, challenging beliefs about Arabia’s desert past.| Archaeology News Online Magazine
Colossal statues of Ramesses II and others recovered from Abu Qir revive interest in Egypt’s lost city of Canopus.| Archaeology News Online Magazine
Ancient rock art found in Thailand’s Ta Kueng Cave may rewrite human history, revealing clues about life 2,000 years ago.| Archaeology News Online Magazine
Ancient Hawaiian petroglyphs reemerge on Oahu's coast as ocean sands shift, revealing 500-year-old figures carved into sandstone.| Archaeology News Online Magazine
Archaeologists uncover the lost Byzantine town of Tharais in Jordan, revealing early Christian life and ancient trade networks.| Archaeology News Online Magazine
New research challenges Australia's early human migration timeline, highlighting conflict between genetic and archaeological evidence.| Archaeology News Online Magazine
Neanderthals used heat and water to extract fat from bones 125,000 years ago, revealing advanced food processing skills.| Archaeology News Online Magazine
Ochre tools from Blombos Cave reveal early Homo sapiens used pigment for advanced stone toolmaking 70,000–90,000 years ago.| Archaeology News Online Magazine
Rare Roman wrist purse fragment found in Czech Republic reveals insights into soldiers' lives during the Marcomannic Wars.| Archaeology News Online Magazine
A 42,000-year-old mammoth ivory boomerang from Obłazowa Cave, Poland, rewrites the origins of boomerangs and symbolic tools in human history.| Archaeology News Online Magazine
Archaeologists have discovered the remnants of a 17th-century home, believed to have been built around 1660 in Colonial Williamsburg, USA.| ArchaeologyNews Online Magazine
The Bronze Age was a period in human history characterized by the widespread use of bronze, a metal alloy composed mainly of copper and tin.| ArchaeologyNews Online Magazine
In the early 1930s, the University of Cincinnati embarked on a historic excavation at Troy, led by archaeologists Carl Blegen, Marion Rawson, and John L. Caskey.| ArchaeologyNews Online Magazine