Tavares Strachan's "The First Supper" took four years to sculpt and is now on display at an exhibition in London
The wooden bed was likely dismantled IKEA-style before being buried alongside a high-status individual
Researchers are wondering whether a newly discovered villa in southern Italy could be linked to the celebrated scholar
Museum officials traveled to the city of Kumasi to return the objects on the 150th anniversary of their seizure
An archaeologist thinks the small, carved holes were used by herders for games of mancala up to 5,000 years ago
Nicknamed the "Bellaghy Boy," he was likely between 13 and 17 when he died around 500 B.C.E.
Construction crews stumbled upon the weapon while dredging the Vistula River in Włocławek
The trio used artificial intelligence to decode sections of the text, which appear to be a philosophical exploration of pleasure
Now open in Detroit, "Regeneration: Black Cinema, 1898–1971" showcases nearly 200 rare props, posters, photographs and more
Officials have announced plans to rebuild the granite blocks they say once covered the Pyramid of Menkaure
To test their hypothesis that the perforated object was a tool, researchers used a replica to create a 16-foot-long rope from cattail reeds
Found in Oxfordshire, the "smithy" was active at the beginning of a transformative era in Britain
Donations poured in to help replace the bronze statue, which a youth baseball nonprofit unveiled in 2021
Archaeologists identified bone fragments of prehistoric modern humans in Germany, suggesting several millennia of coexistence with Neanderthals before the species disappeared
Located in Guatemala, the tomb also held rare mollusk shells, carvings and other funeral offerings
The archive belonged to Herman Matzinger, who performed the autopsy on the 25th president and conducted a bacteriological analysis to rule out the possibility of poison-tipped bullets
Authorities presented "The Schoolmistress" to 96-year-old Francis Wood, the owner’s son, last month
Fashion designers have created a fabric inspired by the Glen Affric tartan, which was discovered in a peat bog and dates to between 1500 and 1600
Billy Mag Fhloinn located the Altóir na Gréine, thought to have vanished in the 19th century, in southwest Ireland
The changing climate may have had ripple effects that made people more susceptible to disease, new research suggests
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