Both domestic and international tourists are drawn to the wrecks made available for diving tourism thanks to the actions of the Ministry of Culture and Tourism and the Gelibolu Historical Site Presidency.
In Canada, a 66-million-year-old smooth-shelled turtle fossil was discovered
A virtually complete skeleton of the Late Cretaceous (Maastrichtian) animal Leiochelys tokaryki has been discovered. Tim Tokaryk, a former curator of paleontology at the Royal Saskatchewan Museum, is honored with the new turtle species’ name.
Tools of Siberian origin in Göbeklitepe
According to Prof. Dr. Semih Güneri, a leading authority on Central Asian archaeology, Göbeklitepe has shown evidence of Siberian stone tool technology.
Fragrance culture of ancient civilizations
The 8th anniversary of World Fragrance Day will be celebrated in Şanlıurfa, the only place in the world where black rose grows. The “Mesopotamia Exhibit on the Trace of Smell” opens on World Fragrance Day, as a result of the 3-year study to which academics and archaeologists contributed in collaboration with the Şanlıurfa Archeology Museum and the Fragrance Culture Association.
British history’s first hand axes were not made by Homo sapiens
Homo Sapiens, proof of prosperous settlements in Britain earlier than anticipated is provided by flint axes going back to 600,000 years ago.
Kiln and tomb found 35 years later in Kelenderis
In the ancient city of Kelenderis, a kiln for commercial production and a child’s tomb buried with glass bracelets and gifts were found.
The world’s earliest known belly button was found on an early-cretaceous dinosaur
Many of our questions about how they lived and what they were like would be answered if we lived in a world where tourists could travel to a remote island resort and see living dinosaurs — or run for from them, as in Jurassic World. Unfortunately, we must rely on information gleaned from fossil remains preserved in rock tens of millions of years ago.
Rose red ancient city Petra
Petra, the “rose-red city” of the ancient Nabataean civilization, is located in southern Jordan and east of Wadi Araba, part of the Great Rift Valley, whose bird flight is about 133 km from the shores of the Gulf of Aqaba.
The DNA of 16 ancient peoples was found on an Indonesian islands
An international team of specialists examined the DNA of 16 ancient people and discovered that thousands of years ago, a set of Indonesian islands served as a location zone.
Roman marble female figure found in Tyana City
A female statue made of marble with clear facial characteristics and undamaged was discovered during sounding excavations conducted out by the Niğde Museum Directorate in the ancient city of Tyana.