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Archaeology Tipoffs from TNS Newsletter for 2025-09-19 ( 4 items ) |
Early humans may have walked from Turkiye to mainland Europe, new groundbreaking research suggests (10)
LONDON, England, Sept. 18 [Category: BizMedia] -- Taylor and Francis Group, a publishing company, posted the following news release:
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Early humans may have walked from Turkiye to mainland Europe, new groundbreaking research suggests
"Emotional and inspiring" archaeological discovery of Paleolithic tools uncovers a lost, prehistoric passing which may have made it possible to cross between the Ayvalik and Europe
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Continuous landmasses, now submerged, may have made it possible for early more PR
Free University of Brussels-VUB: Press Invitation - How a Forgotten Kingdom Dominated the Medieval Caucasus (10)
BRUSSELS, Belgium, Sept. 18 -- Free University of Brussels-VUB issued the following news release:
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Press invitation: How a forgotten kingdom dominated the medieval Caucasus
Historian John Latham-Sprinkle presents his new book The Kingdom of Alania at the VUB
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What did medieval kingdoms need in order to function? That intriguing question lies at the heart of historian John Latham-Sprinkle's new book The Kingdom of Alania. On 25 September, the Vrije Universiteit Brussel (VUB), together more PR
Leiden University: Archaeologist at Binnenhof - 'Even the Staff Ate Heron' (10)
LEIDEN, The Netherlands, Sept. 18 -- Leiden University issued the following news:
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Archaeologist at Binnenhof: 'Even the staff ate heron'
An Iron Age skull, a unicorn for cleaning your ear and thousands of beer jugs. Alumnus and archaeologist Chris Muysson has made remarkable discoveries at the Binnenhof government complex in The Hague. 'Each puzzle piece tells us more about its history.'
'Stick a spade in the ground anywhere here and you'll find stoneware jugs [from the 14th and 15th c more PR
UNC-Greensboro: Greece and Grit Set Students Up for Success (10)
GREENSBORO, North Carolina, Sept. 19 -- The University of North Carolina Greensboro campus issued the following news:
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Greece and grit set students up for success
This summer, on the Greek Island of Kea, five UNC Greensboro students joined an archeological expedition to study cultural artifacts on the northwest surface of the island. The artifacts - pieces of pottery, stone tools, and metal slag -- were collected between 2012 and 2014 build on a study that began in 1983. For 13 years, s more PR
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