Skip to content
  • News
  • Archaeology
  • Car
  • Celebrity
  • Crafts
  • Food
  • Nature
  • Radio
  • Sport
  • Technology
  • U.K.

Earliest English medieval shipwreck site uncovered off Dorset coast

Posted on July 21, 2022
Earliest English medieval shipwreck site uncovered off Dorset coast

Maritime archaeologists from Bournemouth University have uncovered the remains of a medieval ship and its cargo dating back to the 13th century off the coast of Dorset. The survival of the vessel is extremely rare and there are no known wrecks of seagoing ships from the 11th to the 14th centuries in English waters. The…

Read More “Earliest English medieval shipwreck site uncovered off Dorset coast” »

Archaeology, Europe, UK, Underwater Archaeology, Western Europe

Archaeologists carry out first dig at tomb linked to King Arthur

Posted on July 4, 2022
Archaeologists carry out first dig at tomb linked to King Arthur

Archaeologists from The University of Manchester have started a dig at a 5,000-year-old tomb linked to King Arthur, hoping to answer some of the mysteries surrounding the enigmatic site in the process. Arthur’s Stone [Credit: University of Manchester] The experts are working in partnership with English Heritage, which looks after Arthur’s Stone in Herefordshire, to…

Read More “Archaeologists carry out first dig at tomb linked to King Arthur” »

Archaeology, England, Europe, UK, Western Europe

2000-year-old human remains and animal sacrifices found in Dorset

Posted on July 1, 2022
2000-year-old human remains and animal sacrifices found in Dorset

Archaeology students from Bournemouth University have found the remains of prehistoric people and animal sacrifices in a recently discovered Iron Age settlement in Dorset. The skeletal remains were found in crouched positions in oval shaped pits [Credit: Bournemouth University] The site, which consists of typical Iron Age round houses and storage pits was discovered by…

Read More “2000-year-old human remains and animal sacrifices found in Dorset” »

Archaeology, England, Europe, UK, Western Europe

Canterbury suburbs were home to some of Britain’s earliest humans

Posted on June 22, 2022
Canterbury suburbs were home to some of Britain’s earliest humans

Archaeological discoveries made on the outskirts of Canterbury, Kent (England) confirm the presence of early humans in southern Britain between 560,000 and 620,000 years ago, making it one of the earliest known Paleolithic sites in northern Europe. A selection of handaxes discovered in the 1920s [Credit: University of Cambridge] The breakthrough, involving controlled excavations and…

Read More “Canterbury suburbs were home to some of Britain’s earliest humans” »

Anthropology, Early Humans, Europe, UK, Western Europe

More than 8,000 frog bones found by Iron Age roundhouse in Cambridgeshire

Posted on June 15, 2022
More than 8,000 frog bones found by Iron Age roundhouse in Cambridgeshire

Archaeology is not just the study of past human activity. It also looks at the animals that inhabited ancient landscapes. During excavations on the National Highways A14 Cambridge to Huntingdon Road Improvement Scheme we retrieved more than four tonnes of animal bones, which we are now studying in detail.  Research will tell us which species…

Read More “More than 8,000 frog bones found by Iron Age roundhouse in Cambridgeshire” »

Archaeology, England, Europe, UK, Western Europe, Zooarchaeology

Wreck of historic royal ship discovered off the English coast

Posted on June 9, 2022
Wreck of historic royal ship discovered off the English coast

The wreck of one of the most famous ships of the 17th century — which sank 340 years ago while carrying the future King of England James Stuart — has been discovered off the coast of Norfolk in the UK, it can be revealed today. Julian and Lincoln Barnwell measure one of the Gloucester’s cannons[Credit:…

Read More “Wreck of historic royal ship discovered off the English coast” »

Archaeology, England, Europe, Ticker, UK, Underwater Archaeology, Western Europe

Europe’s largest land predator unearthed on the Isle of Wight

Posted on June 9, 2022
Europe’s largest land predator unearthed on the Isle of Wight

Research led by palaeontologists at the University of Southampton has identified the remains of one of Europe’s largest ever land-based hunters: a dinosaur that measured over 10m long and lived around 125 million years ago. Illustration of White Rock spinosaurid [Credit: UoS/A Hutchings] Several prehistoric bones, uncovered on the Isle of Wight, on the south…

Read More “Europe’s largest land predator unearthed on the Isle of Wight” »

Dinosaurs, England, Fossils, Palaeontology, UK

Ancient graffiti uncovered in Vindolanda

Posted on May 27, 2022
Ancient graffiti uncovered in Vindolanda

Nestled in the picturesque Northumberland countryside, Vindolanda with its fort and settlement is a treasure trove of everyday life during the Roman occupation of Britain and beyond. What makes this part of the Hadrian’s Wall World Heritage Site so exceptional, is that some of the nearly 2,000-year-old artefacts uncovered reveal human emotions and feelings. Perhaps…

Read More “Ancient graffiti uncovered in Vindolanda” »

Archaeology, England, Europe, Ticker, UK, Western Europe

Prehistoric feces reveal parasites from feasting at Stonehenge

Posted on May 19, 2022
Prehistoric feces reveal parasites from feasting at Stonehenge

A new analysis of ancient faeces found at the site of a prehistoric village near Stonehenge has uncovered evidence of the eggs of parasitic worms, suggesting the inhabitants feasted on the internal organs of cattle and fed leftovers to their dogs. The prehistoric monument of Stonehenge in Wiltshire, UK [Credit: Adam Stanford] Durrington Walls was…

Read More “Prehistoric feces reveal parasites from feasting at Stonehenge” »

Archaeology, England, Europe, Forensics, UK, Western Europe

Study reveals Stonehenge landscape before the world-famous monument

Posted on April 28, 2022
Study reveals Stonehenge landscape before the world-famous monument

Four thousand years before Stonehenge was constructed, land within the World Heritage Site was covered by open woodland, with meadow-like clearings, inhabited by grazing animals and hunter-gatherers, according to new research by the University of Southampton. A) Timeline of the Stonehenge landscape, including radiocarbon dates from Blick Mead and other significant Stonehenge World Heritage Archaeological Sites….

Read More “Study reveals Stonehenge landscape before the world-famous monument” »

Ancient Environment, Archaeology, Earth Science, England, Europe, UK, Western Europe

Posts navigation

1 2 … 275 Next
Home
Contact
Privacy Policy
DMCA

Francis Street Dublin, Ireland