Dive into the captivating world of glass art with David White as he showcases his mastery of flame-working in this ...
The first discoveries in Cádiz date to the early 20th century. In 1914, French scholar Abbé Henri Breuil documented dozens of ...
A tiny bird figurine discovered in a refuse heap in the Henan province of China is changing what historians thought they knew ...
Palaeolithic humans living on both sides of the Strait of Gibraltar were a creative bunch to say the least, and were ...
Deep in the central Sahara, the Ennedi Plateau — part of Chad’s Ennedi Massif World Heritage Site — rises out of the desert in a series of sandstone arches, towers, cliffs, and canyons sculpted over ...
In the center is a tree from Domuztepe. The trunk is perfectly centered, the leaves organized. On either side, the tree is surrounded by buildings that resemble multistorey huts with triangular tops.
Halafian pottery shows that early agricultural societies practiced advanced mathematical thinking through plant-based art long before writing. Researchers report that the Halafian culture of northern ...
Is it possible for us to understand the meaning behind prehistoric rock art? In this video, ancient historian Tristan explores Stone Age rock carvings in Scotland with leading experts, to try and ...
Over 8,000 years ago, early farming communities in northern Mesopotamia were already thinking mathematically—long before numbers were written down. By closely studying Halafian pottery, researchers ...
A new study reveals that the Halafian culture of northern Mesopotamia (c. 6200–5500 BCE) produced the earliest systematic plant imagery in prehistoric art, flowers, shrubs, branches, and trees painted ...
Researchers uncovered rare azurite traces on a Final Paleolithic artifact, overturning assumptions that early Europeans used only red and black pigments. The find suggests ancient people possessed ...