Un equipo de arqueólogos turcos ha descubierto en la costa del Mar Egeo uno de los yacimientos paleolíticos más importantes jamás documentados en la región. Se llama Biber Deresi, está situado cerca de la antigua ciudad de Assos (Çanakkale), y su estudio está revolucionando lo que sabemos sobre cómo los primeros humanos salieron de África […]|
A workshop on the geothermal resources in the Eastern and Southeastern Anatolia Region of Türkiye will be held in Diyarbakir on 23-25 October 2025. The post Workshop on geothermal resources in Eastern and SE Anatolia, Türkiye to be held on 23-25 October 2025 first appeared on ThinkGeoEnergy - Geothermal News & Insights.| ThinkGeoEnergy – Geothermal News & Insights
Hello, I am Claudia Posani and I am very glad to write an article for the CREWS blog. I am interested in Hittitology, with a particular focus on Syro-Anatolian Iron Age history and on hieroglyphic Luwian inscriptions. I spent two months as a Visiting Fellow with the CREWS project. During May and June 2022, I … Continue reading Multilingual Syro-Anatolian Iron Age inscriptions – my research as a CREWS Project Visiting Fellow: Guest post by Claudia Posani|
It seems like we're getting close to the moment when Iosif Lazaridis has to finally admit that the Proto-Indo-European (PIE) homeland was located in Eastern Europe, and also that the ancestors of the Hittites and other Anatolian speakers entered Anatolia via the Balkans. Let's discuss. However, please note that comments from total morons, trolls and/or mentally unstable people will not| Eurogenes Blog
A new preprint at bioRxiv by Kerdoncuff et al. makes the following, somewhat surprising, claim: One of the individuals, referred to Sarazm_EN_1 (I4290) described above that was discovered with shell bangles showing affiliation with South Asia, has significant amount AHG-related ancestry, while a model without AHG-related ancestry provides the best fit for Sarazm_EN_2 (I4210) (Table S4.5). First| Eurogenes Blog
This is about the only successful qpAdm model that I can find for the pair of Early Bronze Age (EBA) females from Yassitepe, Turkey, using a decent set of outgroups and markers. I wouldn't take it too literally, but it does suggest a potentially significant level of European ancestry, including some steppe ancestry, in these Yassitepe individuals. TUR_Aegean_Yassitepe_EBA| Eurogenes Blog
A controversial new paper says Göbekli Tepe may be the world's oldest calendar, reigniting debate over the 11,500-year-old megalithic site.| The Debrief
Türkiye’s Gobekli Tepe has long been considered the world’s oldest settlement, an extraordinary outlier. Here,… The post Boncuklu Tarla: The Town Older than Gobekli Tepe appeared first on Historic Mysteries.| Historic Mysteries
Situado a una veintena de kilómetros de Antalya, en el Parque Nacional de Güllük Dağı, hay un lugar llamado Karabunar Kiui en el que se ubica el Sitio Arqueológico de Termessos. Acoge los bien preservados restos de la antigua ciudad de Termeso, una urbe -fortaleza a la que la mitología atribuye su f| La Brújula Verde
From Daily Sabah:| Women of History
The debate over the location of the so called Indo-Anatolian homeland won't be decided by the persistence of any type of genetic ancestry in...| eurogenes.blogspot.com
A paper in Science co-authored by around 200 scientists from some of the world's top academic institutions surely must mean something, righ...| eurogenes.blogspot.com
Update 29/08/22: Dear Iosif #2 ... I'm skimming through the Lazaridis, Alpaslan-Roodenberg et al. paper that just came out at Science ...| eurogenes.blogspot.com