The Tomb of Queen Sesheshet
A recently discovered pyramid and tomb in Egypt may shed light on a dark episode in a pharaonic tradition of court intrigue
Bodies of Evidence in Southeast Asia
Excavations at a cemetery in a Thai village reveal a 4,000-year-old indigenous culture
Chasing the Lydian Hoard
Author Sharon Waxman digs into the tangle over looted artifacts between the Metropolitan Museum of Art and Turkish government
Gobekli Tepe: The World’s First Temple?
Predating Stonehenge by 6,000 years, Turkey’s stunning Gobekli Tepe upends the conventional view of the rise of civilization
New Light on Stonehenge
The first dig in 44 years inside the stone circle changed our view of why—and even when—the monument was built
In Iraq, a Monastery Rediscovered
Near Mosul, war has helped and hindered efforts to excavate the 1,400-year-old Dair Mar Elia monastery
Showing Their Age
Dating the Fossils and Artifacts that Mark the Great Human Migration
Were “Hobbits” Human?
Debate rages over an Indonesian fossil find
The Great Human Migration
Why humans left their African homeland 80,000 years ago to colonize the world
Why the Smithsonian Has a Fake Crystal Skull
The Natural History Museum’s quartz cranium highlights the epic silliness of the new Indiana Jones movie
Where Dinosaurs Roamed
Footprints at one of the nation’s oldest—and most fought over—fossil beds offer new clues to how the behemoths lived
Acropolis Now
A modern museum of ancient Greece rises near the Parthenon
Unlocking Mysteries of the Parthenon
Restoration of the 2,500-year-old temple is yielding new insights into the engineering feats of the golden age’s master builders
The Lost Fort of Columbus
On his voyage to the Americas in 1492, the explorer built a small fort somewhere in the Caribbean
Taking a Dinosaur’s Temperature
Polar species heat up one of paleontology’s great debates
The Strange Lives of Polar Dinosaurs
How did they endure months of perpetual cold and dark?
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