Long before ancient civilizations in the Old World, Native American hunter-gatherers were already playing games of chance using carefully crafted bone dice more than 12,000 years ago. New research ...
People living at a Bronze Age settlement in northern China, Erdaojingzi, carried ancestry linked to distant farming ...
A new archeological finding shows that Native Americans were exploring probability through games of chance far earlier than ...
World of Antiquity on MSN
When the Sea Peoples threatened ancient Egypt
At the end of the Bronze Age, a series of invasions shook the ancient world. Among the most mysterious groups were the Sea ...
Research published in American Antiquity, the flagship journal of North American archaeology, presents evidence that the ...
Travel back in time with Stacker through some of the most impressive archeological discoveries in the world, according to ...
Archaeologists uncovered the loom on a raised platform connected to several houses on the western slope of the settlement.
Learn about the discovery of a 2,400-year-old iron-smelting workshop in Senegal, shedding light on the Iron Age in West ...
Research suggests Mycenaeans may have influenced Scandinavian cultures during the Bronze Age, with evidence from royal ...
History Time on MSN
When the Bronze Age Died, the Drought, Earthquakes, and Sea Peoples That Erased a World
Around 1200 BC, a terrifying convergence of forces, famine, seismic catastrophe, collapsing trade, and mysterious invaders ...
A team of international archaeologists has uncovered evidence of a vast trade network that connected civilizations across Africa, Asia, and Europe during the Bronze Age, some 3,500 years ago.
Italy's islands have a unique blend of history, nature, food, and culture—and at least one is calling your name.
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