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Rare Bronze Age burials untouched by cremation just revealed how ordinary people really lived in Central Europe — bodies preserved intact, not burned
In a cemetery in Lower Austria, 714 graves from the Early Bronze Age held bodies that were never burned. The dead at ...
Scientists have uncovered remarkable new details about Bronze Age life in Central Europe by studying rare burials untouched by cremation. The research reveals communities experimenting with new foods, ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. The eruption of Mount Vesuvius in 79 AD destroyed the Roman towns of Pompeii and Herculaneum and is one of the most culturally ...
Recent research suggests that many of the Bronze Age people buried in Seddin, Germany, were not locals but came from outside the region. While archaeologists had previously uncovered artefacts from ...
Archaeologists have uncovered evidence of a 4,000-year-old massacre in Somerset, revealing the brutal slaughter and probable cannibalism of people in what is now believed to the bloodiest known act of ...
Archaeologists have uncovered the secrets of a “vast” 3,500-year-old settlement in Kazakhstan thought to have been an early form of a city. Described as “one of the most remarkable discoveries” in the ...
Ancient genomes from northwest Europe show that farming, foraging, migration, and marriage shaped prehistory in ways far more ...
4,000-year-old Leeds burial mound reveals Bronze Age secrets ...
People living in Bronze Age-era Denmark may have been able to travel to Norway directly over the open sea, according to a new study. To complete this study, the research team developed a new computer ...
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