Last updated: 10 March 2026. More for You ...
6,000-year-old pottery reveals prehistoric humans cooked gourmet food with plants and fish, offering new insight into ancient ...
Shards from the Baltic region showed higher traces of freshwater fish, with some regions also including berries, sea beetroot, flowering rush, beets, and sea club-rush tubers. There were also traces ...
A prehistoric mass grave in Serbia reveals that more than 77 people—mostly women and children—were deliberately killed in a brutal act of violence about 2,800 years ago. Genetic evidence suggests the ...
Learn how microscopic food traces in ancient pottery reveal the varied ingredients of prehistoric European cuisine.
The earliest mass graves in Europe date back just over 7,000 years. They reveal brutal evidence for violence beyond the simple act of killing. The motives for these events are probably diverse but ...
A new study of ancient pottery adds to evidence that hunter-gatherers in Europe ate more than meat and developed early elements of cuisine.
Archaeologist and professional diver Julianna O’Donoghue has explored everything from a drowned forest off the Cork coast to a 17th century ship laden with coconuts ...
Plan an unforgettable 2026 day trip with Ohio historic sites packed with timeless architecture, fascinating exhibits, and photo-worthy stops.
The Gran Recorrido del Llevant is redefining Mallorca beyond its beach reputation, offering a long-distance hiking route ...
From Tattoos To Ceremonies: Ancient Bone Needles Served Far More Purposes Than Survival In A Nutshell Researchers analyzed nearly 1,200 documented uses of bone needles and awls across 59 Indigenous ...
Regina Barber and Katia Riddle of NPR's Short Wave podcast talk about prehistoric cooking, earthquakes in the Pacific Northwest and how teens are sleeping less than before.