The discovery of the lost ‘Golden City’ in Luxor, home to the Valley of the Kings, according to famous Egyptologist Zahi Hawass, has revealed a huge enigma.
Category: News
The first settlement of the Cimmerians in Anatolia may be Kırıkkale
Thousands of years of history are unearthed by a Japanese archaeologist. According to excavations conducted by a Japanese researcher, Büklükale was the first Cimmerian colony in Anatolia after they departed Ukraine before Christ.
Sculpture head of Maya maize god discovered in Mexico
According to Mayan legend, the maize god was decapitated at harvest each year and reborn in the new growing season. A sculpted head of a Mayan maize god was discovered during excavations in Palenque, Mexico, according to a group of archaeologists from the National Institute of Anthropology and History.
Visit from the BBC for the Haverfordwest excavation
A BBC history presenter paid a visit to a Pembrokeshire archaeological dig where human bones were discovered. The Haverfordwest excavations aroused interest.
Haydarpaşa treasure: They dug 5 meters and went down to the 5th century BC
The four-year excavation of Haydarpaşa station has brought back Istanbul a huge treasure. Bathhouses, mansions, palaces, chopsticks and a room rewinding history… More than 50,000 vaults of artifacts have been unearthed.
Scientists’ perceptions of cave art may change as a result of the discovery of mysterious drawings
A team of scientists has revealed massive Native American drawings that had been hidden in an Alabama cave for more than 1,000 years. It is the largest known cave art found in North America.
3,400-year-old Rare Bronze Age artifacts found with metal detector
After being discovered in North Wales over five years ago, a pair of unique relics dating back about 3,400 years to the Middle Bronze Age have been designated treasure. During the Bronz Age, the two bronze mould valves were used to produce palstaves (a kind of axe).
Remains of Akçakale Castle emerging from under the sea
Divers are seeking for ruins under the water as part of the excavations at Akçakale Castle, which is perched on a cliff overlooking the sea in Trabzon’s Akçaabat district.
Volunteer uncovering very rough Ancient Roman graffiti at Vindolanda
Dylan Herbert discovered a stone with a phallus drawing and an insult on it, which is intended to delight tourists for many years.
Mayan metropolis, which is now on exhibit, unearthed by contractors
Archaeologists have revealed their on the ruins of a 1,500-year-old Mayan village during construction of an industrial park on Mexico’s Yucatán peninsula, complete with palaces, pyramids, and plazas.