News

Bronze Age humans have been credited with a number of civilizational advancements: the invention of irrigation, the wheel, writing systems and the ability to forge weapons and tools from the ...
Archaeologists uncovered one of Britain's oldest and most complete wooden tools—a 3,500-year-old spade—during excavations in the Arne Moors in Dorset. The remarkable find was made by Wessex ...
Bronze Age humans have been credited with a number of civilizational advancements: the invention of irrigation, the wheel, writing systems and the ability to forge weapons and tools from the ...
Once capable of creating stone tools, Stone Age cultures transformed into Bronze Age civilizations by melting and smelting metals, working with copper and then copper alloys, including tin bronzes.
Archaeologists reveal how ‘exceptionally rare’ 3,500-year-old wooden spade was so well preserved. The rare Bronze Age spade was discovered during a coastal habitat project in Poole Harbour ...
Between c. 1400 and 1200 BC, impressive palaces were the focal points of power for the Mycenaeans in Bronze Age Greece.
2,000-year-old statues discovered that archaeologists say could "rewrite history" 01:00 Skeletal remains and skull fragments of two Bronze Age women were found at a construction site in the U.K.
It was once a small and seemingly cozy late Bronze Age village. A settlement of five circular dwellings was built on stilts about 6.5 feet above a rambling river in eastern England.
Humans Extremely rare Bronze Age wooden tool found in English trench. In a wetland on the south coast of England, archaeologists dug up one of the oldest and most complete wooden tools ever found ...
The next leap in history occurred around 3000 B.C.E. when several cultures discovered the perks of producing bronze. After initially using copper for tools, humans turned to the more durable bronze, ...
The Mystery of the Bronze Age Ax Heads Mailed Anonymously to an Irish Museum Has Been Solved A farmer stumbled upon the 4,000-year-old artifacts while working in his field in central Ireland ...