Archaeologists recently discovered a massive 2,000-year-old stone basin in ancient Gabii, Italy, revealing early Roman public architecture from Rome's powerful rival city.
A history buff set out to discover the location of two mysterious features marked on an 1850s Ordnance Survey map.
The Brighterside of News on MSN
Ancient stone tools reveal how early seafarers from Asia became America’s first people
Long before there were maps or names for continents, a handful of people stood at the edge of the world. Picture them on a ...
Karen Wigen is Frances and Charles Field Professor in History at Stanford University. Speaking with Srijana Mitra Das at Times Evoke, she discusses th ...
From looping hallways to echoing stairwells, eerie architecture taps into ancient survival instincts—and exposes how our ...
A history lover who used Ordnance Survey maps of Oxfordshire from the 1850s as a guide, was left stunned after tracking down ...
IFLScience on MSN
Strange Patterns In Ancient Rocks Reveal Earth's Tumbling Magnetic Field, Not Speeding Continents
Magnetic deposits laid down during the Ediacaran Period, 630 million years ago to 541 million years ago, are not inexplicable ...
The hotly anticipated new museum boasts some of the greatest treasures of antiquity. But there are some notable exceptions.
A history lover was 'blown away' after following an 1850s Ordnance Survey map to a remote location - and he was not ...
On November 1, 2025, “The Healing Path” has its global premiere on the Phoenix Satellite TV’s omnimedia platform. After a ...
Self-confessed history-lover, Chris Gledhill, was intrigued by the markings 'Physic Well' and 'Spring' on an Ordnance Survey ...
Elon Musk funds AI-powered archaeology in Rome, pledging $1M to help researchers digitally rebuild ancient sites and rewrite ...
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