Scholars create a virtual archive of antiquities destroyed by extremists in Syria and Iraq
Smithsonian experts train a brave band of conservators in northern Iraq to brace buildings and rescue artifacts in a hurry
Lost for centuries, the royal capital of the Achaemenid Empire was finally confirmed by Ernst Herzfeld
The deliberate destruction of antiquities by ISIS and others in the birthplace of human civilization is cultural genocide
Smithsonian Journeys Travel Quarterly: India
Deccan's intricate monuments, many of which are carved into cliffs, date back to the sixth century
Once locked in frozen Alaskan dirt, Iñupiat artifacts are being lost to the sea, sometimes faster than scientists can find them
Smithsonian Journeys Travel Quarterly: India
Aaliya Sultana Babi is doing everything in her power to protect and promote India's most significant fossil park
Even nomadic hunter-gatherers engaged in deliberate mass killings 10,000 years ago
Distinctive cut marks on a Siberian mammoth represent the first known evidence of human hunters this far north
DNA analysis of the mummy's pathogens may reveal when and how Ötzi's people came to the Italian Alps
The discovery in a remote part of Indonesia has scholars rethinking the origins of art—and of humanity
Quantum spookiness, a Maya city buried in ash and more in this year’s surprising science
Surprising archaeological finds are breaking new ground in our understanding of Jesus’s time—and the revolution he launched 2,000 years ago
Two crypts uncovered near Washington Square Park a reminder of New York City’s past
The famed archaeologist took detailed notes of what he found inside King Tut's tomb
A recent expedition to the Fourni islands uncovered piles of ancient cargo, including types of amphorae never before seen on the seafloor
Mummification has been practiced for eons and the Egyptians are the best known, but not the only practioners
DNA from Bronze Age victims helped pinpoint mutations that allowed the disease to go from localized illness to deadly pandemic
Wisconsin's Aztalan State Park is home a mysterious pyramidal mound built by the prehistoric Native Americans who once lived there
In a warehouse in Utah, federal agents are storing tens of thousands of looted objects recovered in a massive sting
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