News

This year 80 people put on their waders, grabbed buckets and quadrats (square metal frames), and splashed through the clear ...
Archaeologists in northern Denmark have discovered the remains of a large timber circle that is thousands of years old and ...
A team of archaeologists in Denmark just stumbled upon a Viking hall from the late ninth century C.E. — and they think it may have been built by the king whose name graces today's wireless technology.
The 50-odd graves date to when Gorm the Old and Queen Thyra ruled Northern Denmark. Thyra is known for being the mother of Harald Bluetooth, the ruler who gave the wireless technology its name.
A new simulation suggests that ancient people in northern Denmark and southwestern Norway may have traveled directly between the two regions, crossing more than 100 kilometers (62 miles ...
The Bronze Age cultures of what are now northern Denmark and southwestern Norway are quite alike, with similar artifacts, burial systems, and architecture. Cultural exchange between the two ...