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1000 results for “archaeology”
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Earliest shipwreck in Singapore reveals 14th century trading port and massive ceramic cargo
A four-year maritime excavation off the coast of Singapore has produced the earliest known shipwreck in the country’s waters and strong evidence of a busy trading port in the 14th century. The vessel, known as the Temasek Wreck, sank sometime between 1340 and 1352...
More information: https://archaeologymag.com/2026/02/earliest-shipwreck-in-singapore-trading-port/
Follow us @archaeology.news
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Earliest shipwreck in Singapore reveals 14th century trading port and massive ceramic cargo
A four-year maritime excavation off the coast of Singapore has produced the earliest known shipwreck in the country’s waters and strong evidence of a busy trading port in the 14th century. The vessel, known as the Temasek Wreck, sank sometime between 1340 and 1352...
More information: https://archaeologymag.com/2026/02/earliest-shipwreck-in-singapore-trading-port/
Follow us @archaeology.news
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Earliest shipwreck in Singapore reveals 14th century trading port and massive ceramic cargo
A four-year maritime excavation off the coast of Singapore has produced the earliest known shipwreck in the country’s waters and strong evidence of a busy trading port in the 14th century. The vessel, known as the Temasek Wreck, sank sometime between 1340 and 1352...
More information: https://archaeologymag.com/2026/02/earliest-shipwreck-in-singapore-trading-port/
Follow us @archaeology.news
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Earliest shipwreck in Singapore reveals 14th century trading port and massive ceramic cargo
A four-year maritime excavation off the coast of Singapore has produced the earliest known shipwreck in the country’s waters and strong evidence of a busy trading port in the 14th century. The vessel, known as the Temasek Wreck, sank sometime between 1340 and 1352...
More information: https://archaeologymag.com/2026/02/earliest-shipwreck-in-singapore-trading-port/
Follow us @archaeology.news
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Historic cannon unearthed during Hull’s Queen’s Gardens restoration in England
Construction workers uncovered a large cast-iron cannon while restoring Queen’s Gardens in Hull. The cannon appeared on 13 February when CR Reynolds contractors were digging for a water storage tank...
More information: https://archaeologymag.com/2026/02/historic-cannon-hull-s-queen-s-gardens/
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Historic cannon unearthed during Hull’s Queen’s Gardens restoration in England
Construction workers uncovered a large cast-iron cannon while restoring Queen’s Gardens in Hull. The cannon appeared on 13 February when CR Reynolds contractors were digging for a water storage tank...
More information: https://archaeologymag.com/2026/02/historic-cannon-hull-s-queen-s-gardens/
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Historic cannon unearthed during Hull’s Queen’s Gardens restoration in England
Construction workers uncovered a large cast-iron cannon while restoring Queen’s Gardens in Hull. The cannon appeared on 13 February when CR Reynolds contractors were digging for a water storage tank...
More information: https://archaeologymag.com/2026/02/historic-cannon-hull-s-queen-s-gardens/
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Historic cannon unearthed during Hull’s Queen’s Gardens restoration in England
Construction workers uncovered a large cast-iron cannon while restoring Queen’s Gardens in Hull. The cannon appeared on 13 February when CR Reynolds contractors were digging for a water storage tank...
More information: https://archaeologymag.com/2026/02/historic-cannon-hull-s-queen-s-gardens/
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Historic cannon unearthed during Hull’s Queen’s Gardens restoration in England
Construction workers uncovered a large cast-iron cannon while restoring Queen’s Gardens in Hull. The cannon appeared on 13 February when CR Reynolds contractors were digging for a water storage tank...
More information: https://archaeologymag.com/2026/02/historic-cannon-hull-s-queen-s-gardens/
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7,000-year-old beaver bone pit discovered in Germany reveals Neolithic fur hunting practices
Archaeologists in central Germany have uncovered an unusual 7,000-year-old pit packed with beaver bones, offering a rare look at hunting practices and clothing materials used by some of Europe’s earliest farming communities...
More information: https://archaeologymag.com/2026/05/7000-year-old-beaver-bone-pit-in-germany/
Follow @archaeology
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7,000-year-old beaver bone pit discovered in Germany reveals Neolithic fur hunting practices
Archaeologists in central Germany have uncovered an unusual 7,000-year-old pit packed with beaver bones, offering a rare look at hunting practices and clothing materials used by some of Europe’s earliest farming communities...
More information: https://archaeologymag.com/2026/05/7000-year-old-beaver-bone-pit-in-germany/
Follow @archaeology
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7,000-year-old beaver bone pit discovered in Germany reveals Neolithic fur hunting practices
Archaeologists in central Germany have uncovered an unusual 7,000-year-old pit packed with beaver bones, offering a rare look at hunting practices and clothing materials used by some of Europe’s earliest farming communities...
More information: https://archaeologymag.com/2026/05/7000-year-old-beaver-bone-pit-in-germany/
Follow @archaeology
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7,000-year-old beaver bone pit discovered in Germany reveals Neolithic fur hunting practices
Archaeologists in central Germany have uncovered an unusual 7,000-year-old pit packed with beaver bones, offering a rare look at hunting practices and clothing materials used by some of Europe’s earliest farming communities...
More information: https://archaeologymag.com/2026/05/7000-year-old-beaver-bone-pit-in-germany/
Follow @archaeology
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7,000-year-old beaver bone pit discovered in Germany reveals Neolithic fur hunting practices
Archaeologists in central Germany have uncovered an unusual 7,000-year-old pit packed with beaver bones, offering a rare look at hunting practices and clothing materials used by some of Europe’s earliest farming communities...
More information: https://archaeologymag.com/2026/05/7000-year-old-beaver-bone-pit-in-germany/
Follow @archaeology
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New study reveals how Londoners used weekly death data to survive the Great Plague of 1665
A study in Accounting History examines how Londoners relied on weekly death totals during the Great Plague of 1665 and how those figures shaped both private choices and public policy...More information: https://archaeologymag.com/2026/02/weekly-death-data-of-the-plague-london/
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New study reveals how Londoners used weekly death data to survive the Great Plague of 1665
A study in Accounting History examines how Londoners relied on weekly death totals during the Great Plague of 1665 and how those figures shaped both private choices and public policy...More information: https://archaeologymag.com/2026/02/weekly-death-data-of-the-plague-london/
Follow @archaeology
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New study reveals how Londoners used weekly death data to survive the Great Plague of 1665
A study in Accounting History examines how Londoners relied on weekly death totals during the Great Plague of 1665 and how those figures shaped both private choices and public policy...More information: https://archaeologymag.com/2026/02/weekly-death-data-of-the-plague-london/
Follow @archaeology
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New study reveals how Londoners used weekly death data to survive the Great Plague of 1665
A study in Accounting History examines how Londoners relied on weekly death totals during the Great Plague of 1665 and how those figures shaped both private choices and public policy...More information: https://archaeologymag.com/2026/02/weekly-death-data-of-the-plague-london/
Follow @archaeology
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New study reveals how Londoners used weekly death data to survive the Great Plague of 1665
A study in Accounting History examines how Londoners relied on weekly death totals during the Great Plague of 1665 and how those figures shaped both private choices and public policy...More information: https://archaeologymag.com/2026/02/weekly-death-data-of-the-plague-london/
Follow @archaeology
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How coral buildings are helping archaeologists date colonial-era sites in French Polynesia
Archaeologists working in the Pacific have found a new way to date colonial-era buildings by studying the coral blocks used to build them. The method offers a more direct way to estimate construction dates in regions where written records are limited or incomplete...
More information: https://archaeologymag.com/2026/04/coral-buildings-colonial-era-sites-in-french-polynesia/
#archaeology #archeology #archaeologynews #colonialera #polynesia
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Funazuka Burial Mound in Ikaruga, Japan
Once a heap of dirt with a shrubbery on it, this unassuming mound in a parking lot turned out to be an ancient tumulus.#archaeology #ancient #burial #mounds #dirt #section-Atlas
Funazuka Burial Mound -
Birka Viking Burial Mounds in Birka, Sweden
Sweden's first Viking city is also the site of thousands of burial mounds.#mounds #islands #archaeology #burialplaces #history&culture #vikings #section-Atlas
Birka Viking Burial Mounds -
Dilmun Burial Mounds in Buri, Bahrain
These 4,000-year-old tombs form a surreal landscape.#culturesandcivilizations #bronzeage #history&culture #archaeology #mounds #tombs #burialplaces #section-Atlas
Dilmun Burial Mounds -
⭐ JOB POSTING⭐
Director of Archaeological Research Division. Eugene, OR.
The Museum of Natural and Cultural History is searching for a Director of the Archaeological Research Division to lead a transdisciplinary team of archaeologists and historic preservationists.
Salary: $100,000 - $115,000 per year.
👇
https://careers.uoregon.edu/en-us/job/536599/director-of-archaeological-research-division #globalmuseum #museumjobs #museums #Archaeology -
DNA reveals rare dwarfism in teenager who lived in Italy 12,000 years ago
An international research team has confirmed the earliest known genetic diagnosis in an anatomically modern human, identifying a rare skeletal disorder in a prehistoric adolescent female who lived more than 12,000 years ago...
© Image courtesy of Dr. Adrian Daly
More information: https://archaeologymag.com/2026/01/rare-dwarfism-in-teenager-italy-12000-years-ago/
#archaeology #archeology #archaeologynews #stoneage #Archaeogenetics #Osteoarchaeology #anthropology
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How coral buildings are helping archaeologists date colonial-era sites in French Polynesia
Archaeologists working in the Pacific have found a new way to date colonial-era buildings by studying the coral blocks used to build them. The method offers a more direct way to estimate construction dates in regions where written records are limited or incomplete...
More information: https://archaeologymag.com/2026/04/coral-buildings-colonial-era-sites-in-french-polynesia/
#archaeology #archeology #archaeologynews #colonialera #polynesia
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Neolithic study finds gender roles in Europe were distinct yet remarkably flexible
Researchers have examined 125 adult skeletons from two Neolithic sites in eastern Hungary to study how work, daily routines, and burial customs related to gender. The sites, Polgár-Ferenci-hát, dated to about 5300 to 5070 BCE, and Polgár-Csőszhalom, dated to about 4800 to 4650 BCE...
More info: https://archaeologymag.com/2026/02/gender-roles-in-europe-were-distinct/
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3D metrological analysis connects dispersed Egyptian artifacts and recovers their lost histories
Researchers have developed a new method to reconnect fragmented Egyptian funerary objects with their original context by analyzing precise measurements and three-dimensional surface data...More information: https://archaeologymag.com/2026/02/3d-metrological-analysis-of-dispersed-egyptian-artifacts/
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Ancient cremation pyre uncovered at Sizewell site in England reveals rare prehistoric burial ritual
Archaeologists working at the Sizewell C excavation in Suffolk have uncovered the remains of an ancient cremation pyre at Goose Hill. Finds like this are uncommon because funeral pyres were built above ground and often disappeared after centuries of farming, erosion, and later activity.More information: https://archaeologymag.com/2026/04/cremation-pyre-at-sizewell-site-in-england/
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Second Temple period stone vessel workshop unearthed on Mount Scopus after antiquities theft arrests
A large stone vessel workshop from the Second Temple period has come to light on the eastern slopes of Mount Scopus in Jerusalem after authorities arrested a group suspected of looting antiquities...
More information: https://archaeologymag.com/2026/02/second-temple-stone-vessel-workshop-jerusalem/
Follow @archaeology