An elaborately decorated early medieval double-sided bone comb, found in a warrior’s grave in Fridingen, Germany. To protect the delicate tines, the comb was kept in a case. Early 7th century CE, now housed at the Landesmuseum Württemberg
This decorated comb, carved from an antler, was found in a warrior’s grave in Niederstotzingen, Germany.
To find out who the ᴅᴇᴀᴅ were, a research team led by archaeologist Niall O’Sullivan, who at the time was working at the Eurac Research Insтιтute for Mummy Studies in Bolzano, Italy, and who is now at the Max Planck Insтιтute for the Science of Human History in Jena, Germany, applied next-generation sequencing methods to compile enormous amounts of genetic material from bone samples from the 13 buried individuals—10 adults, one infant, one toddler, and one child.
One gracile young warrior, who some researchers had previously speculated might be female, turned out to be male. So did 10 of the 12 remaining bodies; the Sєx of the final two proved inconclusive. Five of the ᴅᴇᴀᴅ were directly related to one another, but seven were unrelated.
The colossal heads of the Olmec civilization, particularly those discovered at Tres Zapotes in Veracruz, Mexico, stand as some of the most remarkable and mysterious monuments of…
A Remarkable Find In a stunning archaeological discovery near Weymouth, UK, the remains of 51 young Viking men were uncovered, shedding light on the turbulent interactions between…
A Glimpse into Merovingian Life: An Archaeological Marvel In the heart of central Germany, archaeologists have uncovered a breathtaking window into the past—a settlement that whispers stories…
On the sun-baked stone walls of ancient Mesopotamia, a silent but dramatic encounter unfolds. A scene is carved in deep relief, depicting a stark and powerful contrast:…
Towering over the highlands of Cusco, Peru, the citadel of Saqsayhuamán is an architectural marvel that borders on the impossible. Its colossal zigzagging walls, ᴀssembled from limestone…