The Sea Peoples are often cited as one of the key factors behind the collapse of the Bronze Age civilizations. Discover who they were, where they came from, and how they reshaped ancient history.
Recent archaeological findings have unearthed a complex network of massive Bronze Age fortifications in Central Europe, revolutionizing our understanding of prehistoric societies. These "megaforts," ...
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, Vol. 111, No. 48 (December 2, 2014), pp. 17045-17049 (5 pages) The impact of rapid climate change on contemporary human ...
Archaeologists in Cyprus uncovered a Bronze Age settlement and cemetery at Erimi, revealing a central building, northern gate ...
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Large Groups Came Together for Grand Feasts at the End of the Bronze Age in Britain
After analyzing bone fragments found in millennia-old trash piles, researchers say that people may have brought livestock ...
In the Bronze Age, the so-called Nuraghe culture flourished in Sardinia. A culture that is known for tower-like stone constructions, nuraghers, and for the small bronze figures, bronzetti, which often ...
Skeletal remains and skull fragments of two Bronze Age women were found at a construction site in the U.K. Their remains were found in Kent at a building site slated for 41 homes along with animal ...
Where Bronze Age civilizations got large amounts of tin, a scarce metal, to mix with copper into the era’s namesake gold-colored metal has long puzzled archaeologists. A big part of the answer lies in ...
Grape and olive farming traditions have changed through time based on shifts in climate and the needs of the local culture, ...
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