• MAIN PAGE
  • LATEST NEWS
    • Lost Cities
    • Archaeology's Greatest Finds
    • Underwater Discoveries
    • Greatest Inventions
    • Studies
    • Blog
  • PHILOSOPHY
  • HISTORY
  • RELIGIONS
    • Africa
    • Anatolia
    • Arabian Peninsula
    • Balkan Region
    • China - East Asia
    • Europe
    • Eurasian Steppe
    • Levant
    • Mesopotamia
    • Oceania - SE Asia
    • Pre-Columbian Civilizations of America
    • Iranian Plateau - Central Asia
    • Indus Valley - South Asia
    • Japan
    • The Archaeologist Editor Group
    • Scientific Studies
    • Aegean Prehistory
    • Historical Period
    • Byzantine Middle Ages
    • Predynastic Period
    • Dynastic Period
    • Greco-Roman Egypt
  • Rome
  • PALEONTOLOGY
  • About us
Menu

The Archaeologist

  • MAIN PAGE
  • LATEST NEWS
  • DISCOVERIES
    • Lost Cities
    • Archaeology's Greatest Finds
    • Underwater Discoveries
    • Greatest Inventions
    • Studies
    • Blog
  • PHILOSOPHY
  • HISTORY
  • RELIGIONS
  • World Civilizations
    • Africa
    • Anatolia
    • Arabian Peninsula
    • Balkan Region
    • China - East Asia
    • Europe
    • Eurasian Steppe
    • Levant
    • Mesopotamia
    • Oceania - SE Asia
    • Pre-Columbian Civilizations of America
    • Iranian Plateau - Central Asia
    • Indus Valley - South Asia
    • Japan
    • The Archaeologist Editor Group
    • Scientific Studies
  • GREECE
    • Aegean Prehistory
    • Historical Period
    • Byzantine Middle Ages
  • Egypt
    • Predynastic Period
    • Dynastic Period
    • Greco-Roman Egypt
  • Rome
  • PALEONTOLOGY
  • About us

Roman road data overlaid on the confidence map.

Mapping the Empire: New Digital Atlas Reveals Rome’s Vast Hidden Road Network

November 8, 2025

A new digital mapping project has revealed that the ancient Roman road network was far more extensive than previously believed, expanding our understanding of how the empire was connected. The new map, named Itiner-e, shows that the system of Roman roads stretched over 299,000 kilometers, almost 50% more than earlier estimates, redrawing the physical footprint of Roman civilization. Created by an international team of researchers from European universities, the atlas integrates archaeological data, topographical surveys, satellite imagery, and even digitized aerial photos from World War II to reconstruct the routes that once linked Rome to its vast provinces.

According to archaeologist Tom Brughmans of Aarhus University, one of the project’s lead authors, mapping these roads was “a massive puzzle on a continental scale.” The researchers examined subtle traces in landscapes where ancient sources suggested missing routes, identifying roadbeds through variations in vegetation, terrain elevation, and remnants of Roman engineering. The result is the most comprehensive reconstruction ever made of the Roman road system around AD 150, when the empire reached its maximum extent.

Comparison of DARMC (in orange) and Itiner-e (in black) datasets, (a) showing an example from France of a region with increased coverage of roads, and (b) an example of increased spatial detail.


The findings, published in Scientific Data and highlighted by The Independent, show that many previously overlooked regional routes across the Iberian Peninsula, Greece, and North Africa expanded the known network. The map identifies 14,769 road segments, roughly one-third classified as major and two-thirds as secondary. Only 2.7% of them are confirmed with full certainty, while nearly 90% are traced with moderate accuracy. The researchers emphasize that the Roman roads were not just built for military or trade purposes but served as conduits for ideas, cultures, and even diseases, forming the arteries of a connected ancient world.

At its height, the Roman Empire spanned from Britain to Egypt and Syria, encompassing around 55 million people. The new Itiner-e data suggests that a traveler could theoretically move across this vast territory through a single, interconnected road system, comparable to modern European infrastructure. Many modern highways, such as the route linking Bologna, Modena, Parma, Piacenza, and Milan, still follow the same paths as their Roman predecessors.

Workflow summarizing the data collection and digitisation process.


Archaeologist Benjamin Ducke of the German Archaeological Institute, who was not part of the project, called Itiner-e “a foundational resource that will become a reference point for countless future studies.” For Brughmans and his team, the project’s value goes beyond mapping—it provides new insight into the mobility, logistics, and human dynamics of the ancient world. As co-author Adam Pażout from the Autonomous University of Barcelona noted, the Roman engineers’ innovations in bridges, tunnels, and roadbeds still shape the geography and economies of the Mediterranean today.

The Marbles — A British Documentary Rekindles the Debate Over the Parthenon Sculptures

November 7, 2025

A new feature-length documentary, The Marbles, has arrived in British cinemas, reigniting one of the world’s longest-running cultural controversies: the fate of the Parthenon Sculptures, often called the “Elgin Marbles.” Directed by veteran filmmaker David Nicholas Wilkinson, the 114-minute film delves into the history, politics, and moral questions surrounding the famous collection housed in London’s British Museum — and the enduring calls for its return to Athens.

Released nationwide on November 7, 2025, the film coincides with renewed public and diplomatic pressure over cultural restitution. It follows Wilkinson’s three-year investigation into how the Parthenon sculptures were removed from Athens in the early 19th century by Lord Elgin, then Britain’s ambassador to the Ottoman Empire, and how they eventually became centerpiece exhibits in the British Museum.

Unlike many past treatments of the subject, The Marbles avoids polemic. Critics in The Guardian and the Financial Times describe it as “measured, thoughtful, and surprisingly balanced,” offering both sides of the debate. The film gives equal voice to Greek cultural figures, international heritage experts, and British Museum officials, who argue that the institution preserves and contextualizes the sculptures as part of a “universal collection.”

Still, the documentary clearly tilts toward moral introspection. Wilkinson traces how the Parthenon — once a temple to Athena, later a church, mosque, and ruin — has become a global symbol of cultural identity and loss. The film raises uncomfortable questions about the ethics of empire, the responsibilities of museums, and the growing movement demanding the repatriation of looted artifacts worldwide.

Cinematically, The Marbles blends aerial shots of the Acropolis and the British Museum’s Duveen Gallery with interviews and archival material. Wilkinson himself appears on camera, acknowledging his own shift in perspective as he studies the evidence. He concludes, as he told Sky News, that the sculptures were “beyond any reasonable doubt, taken under dubious authority.”

The release arrives at a delicate political moment. Although the British Museum has hinted at a potential “long-term partnership” with Greek institutions, the British government maintains that the law forbids permanent return. Yet polls show that a majority of the British public now favors repatriation.

For art historians and museum professionals, The Marbles offers more than advocacy; it’s a meditation on how nations define ownership, beauty, and historical justice. Whether or not it changes policy, it certainly reframes the narrative — reminding audiences that these stones carved in fifth-century BCE Athens are still alive in the world’s conscience.

Watch Live: The Opening of the Grand Egyptian Museum in Cairo

November 1, 2025

Near the pyramids of Giza, one of the largest archaeological museums in the world is opening its doors. It houses more than 100,000 artifacts spanning seven millennia of history, with the treasures from the tomb of Tutankhamun as its crown jewel — displayed across two of the museum’s fourteen exhibition halls.

After twenty-five years of construction, the museum finally opens. It is considered the largest archaeological museum on the planet. The inauguration ceremony is being broadcast live by hundreds of television networks worldwide. The country’s president welcomed the world leaders attending the event.

The monumental “Grand Staircase,” leading visitors upward to the exhibition halls, is flanked by colossal statues of pharaohs and gods.

Seven Millennia Come to Life
Located just outside the capital, near the Giza Plateau, the museum covers an area of 470,000 square meters. It will host around 100,000 artifacts, including 15,000 that have never been displayed before, spanning seven thousand years of the region’s history. Its massive triangular glass façade echoes the nearby pyramids. Visitors can explore twelve vast halls, each devoted to a distinct period — from the Predynastic and Old Kingdom eras, through the Middle and New Kingdoms, to the Hellenistic and Roman periods.

Construction began in 2005 but was delayed by financial crises, the “Arab Spring,” and other regional upheavals. The total cost exceeded one billion euros. Once fully operational, the museum is expected to attract up to eight million visitors annually, providing a major boost to tourism and the national economy.

At the Inauguration Ceremony
Among those invited are numerous international dignitaries, reflecting the global significance of the event. A strict security plan has been implemented: military snipers have been stationed at elevated points around the museum, while mixed police and army patrols monitor the main access routes to the site.

Archaeologists Discover 'Perfectly Preserved' 70-Million-Year-Old Dinosaur Egg in Argentina

October 23, 2025

A team of palaeontologists in Argentina has uncovered an extraordinary discovery — a dinosaur egg estimated to be around 70 million years old and in near-perfect condition.

The fossilized egg, believed to date back to the Cretaceous period, was found in Patagonia and is so well-preserved that researchers think it could contain embryonic material inside — a potential game-changer in the study of dinosaur evolution.

Finding a dinosaur egg is rare enough, but one with an intact shell and minimal damage is almost unheard of. The remarkable state of preservation has left scientists stunned and excited about what secrets might lie within.

“It was a complete and utter surprise,” said researcher Gonzalo Muñoz in an interview with National Geographic. “It’s not common to find the egg of a possible carnivorous dinosaur, much less in that state. The happiness was spectacular for the team.”

The egg was discovered by a team from Argentina’s Museum of Natural Sciences during a live broadcast on October 7, where viewers around the world witnessed the moment the ancient relic was unearthed.

Experts believe the egg may belong to the Bonapartenykus genus, a type of carnivorous theropod that roamed South America during the late Cretaceous period. Such eggs are exceedingly rare, as carnivorous species laid thinner, more fragile shells that were less likely to survive the fossilization process.

While some may jokingly fear a Jurassic Park-style scenario, scientists emphasize the discovery’s true importance lies in what it could reveal about dinosaur reproduction and development. If embryonic remains are indeed preserved inside, it could provide unprecedented insight into how these fearsome predators evolved, grew, and hatched.

The next phase for the research team involves conducting advanced imaging scans to determine whether any embryonic tissue remains within the egg. Should they find any, it would mark one of the most significant breakthroughs in palaeontology in decades.

“Science can reach many people whom we could not reach before,” said expedition leader Federico Agnolín, reflecting on the decision to livestream the discovery. “It’s wonderful that the world could witness this moment in real time.”

Once studies are complete, the egg will be transferred to the Argentine Museum of Natural Sciences for further analysis before returning to Patagonia, where it will eventually go on public display.

Louvre museum robbery: how the thieves broke in, what they stole and what happens next

October 20, 2025

Louvre Museum Robbery: How Thieves Pulled Off a Daring Heist in Broad Daylight

Police stand near the Louvre Pyramid in Paris after thieves made off with priceless jewels from the museum’s Apollon Gallery.

The Louvre — the world’s most-visited museum — was plunged into chaos on Sunday after a bold daylight robbery at its famed Apollon Gallery, home to France’s Crown Jewels. Eight pieces of historic jewellery were stolen in what authorities are calling a “highly professional operation.”

The Heist: How the Thieves Broke In

At around 9:30 a.m., just half an hour after the museum opened to visitors, four masked thieves arrived in a truck fitted with a basket lift along the Seine-facing side of the Louvre. Using an angle grinder and power tools, they forced entry through a second-floor balcony window.

Once inside, they smashed glass display cases and snatched jewels from the 17th-century gallery. As alarms blared, the thieves fled within minutes, escaping on motorbikes. The entire heist lasted under 10 minutes, according to Interior Minister Laurent Nunez, who described it as “the work of an experienced team who had clearly scouted the location.”

What Was Stolen — and What Wasn’t

The French Culture Ministry confirmed that eight pieces of jewellery were stolen. However, the thieves dropped their most valuable prize — the crown of Empress Eugénie, wife of Napoleon III — while escaping.

They also left behind the Regent Diamond, one of the most famous gems in the world, valued at over $60 million (£45 million) and displayed nearby.

Among the missing treasures are:

  • A sapphire necklace, tiara, and earrings once belonging to Queens Marie-Amélie and Hortense.

  • Several pieces from the Marie-Louise jewellery set, linked to Napoleon’s second wife.

These jewels were part of the Apollon Gallery, designed in 1661 under Louis XIV and later serving as inspiration for Versailles’ Hall of Mirrors.

Shock and Political Fallout

The heist has sparked outrage and political debate across France. Far-right leader Jordan Bardella condemned the theft as “an unbearable humiliation” and a symbol of “state decay.”

President Emmanuel Macron responded swiftly, vowing to recover the stolen pieces and bring the perpetrators to justice. “The theft committed at the Louvre is an attack on our heritage and history,” he said.

Minister Nunez called it “a major robbery” and promised further security reinforcements, noting that despite recent upgrades, the museum’s protections “are not equally robust across all collections.”

Public Reaction: Disbelief at Security Failures

Visitors were left stunned. “How can they ride a lift to a window and take jewels in the middle of the day?” asked Magali Cunel, a teacher visiting from Lyon. “It’s unbelievable that a museum this famous could have such obvious security gaps.”

While masterpieces like the Mona Lisa remain shielded behind bulletproof, climate-controlled glass, the theft highlights vulnerabilities elsewhere among the Louvre’s 33,000 exhibited objects.

Has the Louvre Been Robbed Before?

This isn’t the first time the Louvre has been at the center of an infamous theft.
In 1911, Italian handyman Vincenzo Peruggia stole the Mona Lisa, hiding inside the museum overnight and walking out with it under his coat. The painting was recovered two years later.

In 1956, a visitor threw a stone at the same masterpiece, damaging it and prompting the museum to install protective glass — a security measure that endures today.

What Happens Next

French police have launched a nationwide manhunt, reviewing CCTV footage and investigating possible international buyers or criminal networks that could handle such rare, identifiable artefacts. Experts say the jewels are nearly impossible to sell openly, leading many to fear they could be dismantled or melted down.

For now, the world’s attention turns once again to the Louvre, not for its art — but for one of the most daring museum robberies in modern French history.

“Who’s Afraid of the Ancient Greeks?” – A Defense of Greek Civilization from MMC Brussels

October 18, 2025

By Dimosthenis Vasiloudis


A public discussion titled “Who’s Afraid of the Ancient Greeks?” took place on October 8, 2025, in Brussels, as part of the cultural events organized by the MCC Brussels (Mathias Corvinus Collegium), a European think tank dedicated to the intellectual and cultural renewal of Europe. The panel featured three distinguished speakers: Dr. Benedict Beckeld, philosopher and author of Western Self-Contempt: Oikophobia in the Decline of Civilizations, Dr. Alexander Meert, historian and lecturer at the Vrije Universiteit Brussel and member of the Roman Society Research Center at Ghent University, and Dr. Maren Thom, researcher and film critic, Senior Research Fellow at MCC Brussels. The three academics engaged in a vivid dialogue about the significance of ancient Greek thought and education for contemporary European culture, exploring whether the West still recognizes its Hellenic roots or has become estranged from them in the name of postmodern sensitivity.

The event begins from a simple but often ignored premise: to understand Europe, one must look directly at Greece. Not as a museum relic, but as a living foundation of values, institutions, and intellectual tools that still function when we choose to use them. The introduction sets the stage clearly: Europe is not a bureaucratic invention or a random set of “principles” pulled out of administrative language. It is a historical continuum connecting Greece, Rome, Christianity, the Renaissance, and the Enlightenment. Within that continuum, ancient Greece is not merely an early stage but the primary mechanism that generated and regenerated the very ideas we live by: freedom, risk, self-government, reason, and the union of tragedy and catharsis. The discussion is not nostalgic. It is political in the classical sense: it asks how we live together, how we learn, how we argue, how we transform.

The first argument, presented by Benedict Beckeld, begins with a question: does “the West” exist? His answer is calm and empirical. Not as a physical object, perhaps, but as a historical reality with recognizable forms, memories, models, and influences, absolutely yes. It is no coincidence that Virgil imitates Homer, or that Dante takes Virgil as his guide. The thread is visible in art, architecture, law, and political language. The concept of “the West” is not invalid just because it is abstract; history is made of such abstractions that shape real societies. From there, Beckeld argues that if the West exists, we must see ourselves in the Greeks. Not as marble statues, but as ancestors who faced the same human dilemmas. Athens knew relativism, atheism, moral fatigue, and social decay, just as we do. The debate between physis and nomos, the crisis of faith, and the exhaustion of civic life are recurring patterns. To read them in the Greeks is not anachronism, it is a way to understand our own condition without illusions.

A key point in Beckeld’s speech is the rejection of guilt about “Eurocentrism.” Pride in one’s own heritage is not racism. Just as a Chinese person can be Sino-centric without hostility toward others, a European can love and protect his own cultural forms. Civilizational self-hatred is a dead end. Merely reacting against “decadence” changes nothing. There must be a positive horizon: a clear sense of who we are and what we aim to become, not only what we reject. Here, Greece functions both as mirror and beacon. It shows us the height of achievement but also the depth of human weakness.

From philosophy, the discussion turns to how Greek thought became a machine of balance. Alexander Meert returns to the classical texts to show that Greek philosophy created a worldview that connected the physical and the metaphysical, experience and meaning. Modern discomfort, the thinning of meaning into mere functionality, has led to shallow cults of rationalism and empty substitutes for spirituality. Greek philosophy offers another path: openness that allows both wonder and logic, a sense of measure that avoids extremes, and a dialogical method that teaches us to disagree without destroying one another. The story of Gyges’ ring is not a fable; it is a warning about what happens when nature devours law, when power hides itself under invisibility. Athens lived through plague, impiety trials, and fanaticism, yet within this pendulum Greek philosophy acted as the conscience of society, alerting it to the danger of imbalance.

The essential Greek contribution, Mert continues, lies in the value of reason. Not reason as cold rationalism, but as a living habit of dialogue, of questioning and answering. Dialectic, open debate, frank speech, and equality before the law were not decorative virtues. They were the operating system of a civic order built for citizens, not subjects. When modern universities start using “trigger warnings” for the Iliad or the Odyssey, or quietly censor material “to protect students,” that is not sensitivity but a loss of the Greek principle of endurance in the face of truth. Greek education demanded the strength to face discomfort, not escape it. Mert also notes a practical issue: the decline of classical languages and the rise of ideological theories about “identity.” When education becomes a matter of slogans, we lose the discipline of argument and become prey to every passing fashion.

The artistic dimension enters through Maren Thom, who shifts the focus to Greek drama. She argues that modern censors attack not the content of Greek texts but their form and psychological power. Greek tragedy transforms the audience through conflict, fear, and pity. Catharsis is not therapy; it is the civic process through which citizens learn to face truth without collapse. That is why Athenians built theaters that held thousands and paid the poor to attend. Drama was not private entertainment. It was a civic duty and a form of collective education. The modern tendency to “sanitize” art, to remove what shocks or unsettles us, empties the very engine of drama. The Greek theater worked precisely because it wounded and healed at the same time. Removing that power does not make art safer, only weaker. Thom points out that the flattening of emotional experience in modern storytelling, from Hollywood to animation, has erased catharsis. What remains is affirmation without transformation, narrative without consequence. The result is not morality but boredom.

Some critics at the event raised a fair warning against reading modern categories back into the past. Indeed, the Greeks had no single word for “religion.” Their gods were not objects of belief but participants in ritual, woven into civic life. “Atheos” shifted its meaning across centuries: first “forsaken by the gods,” later “without belief in gods.” Understanding these nuances requires philological care. Yet, as Beckeld replied, recognizing historical difference does not forbid comparison. When Isocrates laments that people no longer believe in the gods, or when Plato in the Laws tries to regulate a collapsing moral order, we see societies struggling with the same fatigue of meaning. To study those reactions is not to distort history but to learn how intelligent cultures respond to their own crises.

Another theme of the debate was the strangeness of the Greeks. They are not just “like us.” Their world was radically different, and that difference educates us. Their concept of honor, their intimacy with war, their fusion of freedom and slavery, their humor and cruelty in the same breath, all challenge our moral comfort. That alien quality is exactly what makes Greek civilization worth studying. Good translations should keep that strangeness alive. Making Homer sound like a modern teenager flattens his power. The goal is not to make the Greeks resemble us but to make us reach up to them.

A member of the audience asked a blunt question: what can we actually do? The answer emerging from MCC Brussels was practical and cultural. Revive the classics in schools. Restore the teaching of Greek and Latin, or at least serious engagement with the texts in accurate translations. Make public exposure to theater and philosophy part of civic education again. Remove the intellectual infantilization of “sensitive content.” Normalize disagreement as a form of learning. Reclaim concepts like frank speech, equality before the law, and civic duty. And above all, craft a positive narrative: pride without arrogance, self-criticism without self-hatred.

The memory of risk also matters. The story of Salamis was highlighted as the perfect symbol: the Athenians chose to abandon their city and fight at sea. They won not through generals or aristocrats but through sailors, the common people. After victory, they demanded political rights. That link between action and institution, courage and citizenship, is the Greek inheritance. Forget it, and democracy becomes a word without substance. Remember it, and it becomes strength again.

In answering those who accuse Greek civilization of racism, sexism, or “white supremacy,” the best response is twofold. First, scientific: do not fear the texts, read them fully, and reject the temptation to project modern categories backward. Second, educational: remind ourselves that truth often wounds before it enlightens, and that art exists to make us stronger, not safer. If we remove catharsis from art and philosophy, we do not produce sensitive societies but fragile ones.

The defense of Greek civilization, as presented in Brussels, is not reactionary nostalgia. It is an argument for courage in intellect and in aesthetics. Greece is not only admiration for beauty. It is, as one speaker put it, the pursuit of the future: playful creativity, democratic invention, balance between reason and reverence, war and wisdom, household and public square. To sever Europe from this root is to build a continent that is poorer, smaller, and easier to manage. MCC Brussels proposes the opposite: a Europe reconnected with its first workshop of the mind. There, the citizen is shaped again and again through speech, action, and transformation.

If this event leaves one clear message, it is that Greek civilization is not just one influence among many. It is our starting archive. From it, we learn to be Europeans without guilt and without arrogance, ambitious yet measured. Every time our age tries to sterilize education or flatten art, ancient philosophy and tragedy remind us of our duty: to stand upright within conflict and emerge changed, a little freer, a little wiser, a little more capable of carrying the weight of our shared city.

Tags Dimosthenis Vasiloudis

The Clay Hives of Al-Kharfi: Bees, Survival, and Innovation in the Desert

October 12, 2025

In the arid hills south of Taif, Saudi Arabia, the ruins of an ancient settlement known as Al-Kharfi hide a remarkable testimony to human resilience: about 1,200 clay and mud beehives carved into the rock face or built on terraces, many still standing in ruinous form. These silent structures whisper of a people who harnessed the power of bees to survive and thrive in a harsh desert environment.

The Discovery & Setting

The site of Al-Kharfi lies in the Maysan Governorate, south of Taif, perched on elevations that receive scarce rainfall. The beehives are clustered along rock walls and slopes, arranged in rows, sometimes one above the other, across uneven terrain. The architecture is simple but effective: cylindrical cavities and rectangular prisms in clay, mud, and rock, often recessed into the hillside to take advantage of natural shading and insulation.

Scholars and local explorers have long known about these hives, which are sometimes called “honey houses” in regional accounts. But in recent years they have drawn increasing attention as archaeological witnesses to desert economies and bee-keeping in antiquity.

Technology, Ecology, and Use

Why build so many beehives? In a landscape where plant growth is limited and rainfall irregular, bees offer a unique resource: honey, wax, propolis, and the pollination services that sustain wild flora. For a community living at the margin of subsistence, these products could have tremendous value.

The clay hives would maintain relatively stable internal temperatures (important for bee brood development), protect against desert winds, and reduce the stress of thermal extremes. Their positioning near valleys or wadis (seasonal water flows) and in shaded rock faces suggests a careful choice of microclimates.

Bee-keeping in the Arabian Peninsula has a long ethnographic tradition: even today, beehives made of clay or hollowed logs are used in mountain regions. The Al-Kharfi complex likely represents an early phase of that tradition.

Honey is more than a sweetener. In preindustrial societies, it functioned as a medicine (antiseptic, wound dressing, digestif), a preservative, a fermentable (in mead or other drinks), and sometimes as a form of portable calories. In times of drought or scarcity, honey could supplement or stabilize diets.

With over a thousand hives, Al-Kharfi may have been a regional honey center—producing surplus not only for local consumption but possibly for trade with nearby oases, caravan routes, or urban settlements in the highland-plain margins.

Social & Economic Implications

The scale of the hive complex implies organized labour, knowledge transfer, seasonal management, and coordination. Someone had to maintain hives, inspect for swarms, harvest safely, preserve the wax, and distribute the product. That suggests social roles (specialists, beekeepers) beyond simple subsistence farming or herding.

Also, the presence of so many hives indicates long-term planning and ecological memory: people knew which slopes to use, how to protect bees in harsh seasons, and how to integrate bee-keeping into their broader livelihood strategies.

It points to mixed economies: not purely pastoral or agricultural, but one that embraced insects as part of the resource mix. In desert frontiers, flexibility is often the margin between collapse and survival.

Challenges & Uncertainties

Our knowledge is fragmentary. We lack detailed excavation reports, chronology data, and paleoenvironmental reconstructions tied to Al-Kharfi. Some questions remain:

  • When exactly were these hives in use (century, millennium)?

  • Did they serve only the local community, or were they part of wider trading networks?

  • How did fluctuations in climate (drought, rainfall variability) affect hive productivity and survival?

  • To what extent were the bees local wild species versus induced feral populations?

Some of the published references are popular or secondary sources; rigorous archaeological publications with stratigraphic data are hard to find.

Thus, while the narrative of “resilience and ingenuity” is compelling, scholars must tread carefully when drawing sweeping claims.

Broader Significance

The clay beehives of Al-Kharfi remind us how humans do not just passively endure hostile environments—they actively shape them, coaxing life even where conditions are unforgiving. These hives represent a bridge between wild ecology and human culture: bees live in the margins, and people extend their domain by learning bee-ecology, microclimates, and behaviors of insects.

In global perspective, such ancient beehive complexes parallel other niche practices (ice harvesting, salt flats, cave fishery, terraced agriculture) in extreme lands. They force us to reevaluate what “marginal” means: what looks barren may conceal systems of knowledge deposited over generations.

Ancient Wheels Without Wheels: Travois Tracks at White Sands Rewriting Transport History

October 12, 2025

In a discovery that upends assumptions about prehistoric mobility in the Americas, researchers have identified drag marks, dating to about 22,000 years ago, alongside human footprints at White Sands National Park (New Mexico). These linear traces may be the oldest known evidence of a travois—a rudimentary sled-like device used by early humans to haul bulky loads across the landscape.

The Site: White Sands and Fossil Footprints

White Sands is already famed for preserving some of the earliest human footprints in North America—tracks embedded in the ancient lakebeds of what was once Paleolake Otero. Researchers have dated many footprints there to between 21,000 and 23,000 years ago, using seeds and sediment layers as chronometers. (nps.gov)

Within these same strata, geologists and archaeologists have now detected linear grooves—features that run alongside, intersect, or parallel human trackways. These are preserved in fine-grained sediments where the ancient terrain was soft and impressionable. (USGS)

What the Drag Marks Look Like

The study published in Quaternary Science Advances (2025) classifies three morphological types of line trace, all associated with nearby human footprints. (ScienceDirect)

  • Type I: Narrow, deep grooves (depth > width), sometimes bifurcating, that may extend for 2–50 m. These often intersect with, or truncate, human prints. (ScienceDirect)

  • Type II: Broader, shallower runnels (width > depth), generally straight, sometimes truncating adjacent footprints. (USGS)

  • Type III: Two equidistant parallel grooves, spaced ~250–350 mm apart, following gently curving paths. Human footprints are often between or adjacent to them. (USGS)

In several cross-section profiles, underlying sediment is deformed—suggesting significant force was applied, not just light dragging. Some grooves show striations that suggest dragging rigid objects, rather than pliable ones. (johnhawks.net)

Why a Travois Is the Best Explanation

Given the patterns and their association with human footprints (rather than animale tracks), the research team argues that the simplest and most plausible explanation is that prehistoric people used travois to move loads. A travois is a basic transport device composed of poles (often in an A- or X-shaped frame) that drag the ground behind a person or animal. In historic contexts in North America, travois were often pulled by dogs or horses (especially among Plains peoples). (ScienceAlert)

The researchers tested the hypothesis by constructing replica travois and dragging them over mudflats in the U.K. and Maine (USA). The tracks produced matched many aspects of the fossil grooves—parallel spacing, groove depth vs width, and the way they interacted with footprints. (ScienceAlert)

Alternative explanations—animals dragging logs, floating wood washed ashore, boat keels, etc.—were considered but found inconsistent with the geometry, context, and associations of the marks. (USGS)

Thus, these drag marks may constitute the earliest known evidence of transport technology in the Americas: humans dragging loads before the invention of the wheel. (USGS)

Behavioral Implications: Movement, Group Life, Logistics

The presence of footprints of varying sizes alongside the drag marks suggests that these were not solitary acts but part of a group activity. Children’s prints appear alongside adult prints, sometimes walking beside or between the drag grooves. This hints that families (or groups of mixed ages) moved together, possibly transporting tools, food, firewood, or even children in makeshift conveyances. (ScienceAlert)

The traces extend for considerable distances (up to ~50 m in some cases) and may intersect or cross other trails, indicating movement through a dynamic landscape, not just short hauls. (USGS)

Given that the environment was wetter and less arid at the time, with lake margins, marshes, vegetation, and game animals, efficient movement and transport would have provided significant advantage. (nps.gov)

Chronology & the Challenge to the “Late Arrival” Model

Perhaps the biggest upshot of this find is what it implies about the timing and sophistication of early human presence in North America.

If the dates around 22,000 years are correct—and that is still a matter of discussion—then the people who left these marks lived during the Last Glacial Maximum, long before the conventionally accepted wave of migration into the Americas ~13,000–16,000 years ago.

In other words, these tracks don’t just push back the arrival date; they imply that those early populations had already invented methods of logistical transport, not merely survival-level walking.

However, the dating is not free from debate. Critics point out that some of the radiocarbon ages are based on Ruppia cirrhosa seeds, which can absorb older carbon from groundwater and distort dates upward.

To mitigate this, more recent studies have applied optically stimulated luminescence (OSL) dating to quartz grains and independent radiocarbon methods, which broadly support the older chronology, although uncertainties remain.

Broader Significance & Future Prospects

This find reshapes how archaeologists think about prehistoric cognition, mobility, and social organization. The use of a travois implies:

  1. Forward planning—anticipating the need to move gear over distances, not just opportunistic foraging.

  2. Technical innovation—a rudimentary “vehicle” device, before wheeled transport.

  3. Social structure—group cooperation and roles (some hauling, some walking) in daily life.

It also invites reexamination of other prehistoric sites globally: might similar linear traces have been overlooked or misinterpreted? Might this push us to look for indirect evidence of transport technology (e.g. groove marks, substrate deformation) in contexts where the vehicles themselves don’t survive?

The White Sands site, thus, is not just about footprints or exotic antiquity; it’s about the ingenuity of human beings in extreme times. Even when our tools and machines are lost to decay, the marks we leave behind—if we look closely enough—can tell stories of our ancestors’ brilliance.

In Americas Tags Studies

Ancient Ritual Knife Unearthed on Poland’s Baltic Coast After a Storm?

October 10, 2025

A recent post claims that after a violent storm in northern Poland, a section of cliff collapsed and revealed a 2,800‑year‑old ceremonial knife embedded in clay. According to the story, two metal detectorists, Katarzyna Herdzik and Jacek Łukoski, discovered the artifact on the Baltic coast, and it is now being handled by the Museum of the History of Kamień Land. The knife is said to date to the Hallstatt period and bears intricate motifs suggesting use in sacred rites rather than warfare.

Yet, as fascinating as the narrative sounds, we at The Archaeologist believe there are substantial reasons to doubt its authenticity until further proof emerges. The article offers no independent archaeological corroboration, no published laboratory analyses, and no record of stratigraphic context—or how the artifact was documented in situ by professionals. The exceptionally pristine condition of the dagger is also suspicious for something claimed to have lain exposed in clay for nearly three millennia.

Until the museum or a peer‑reviewed journal publishes detailed metallurgical tests, microscopic wear analysis, radiometric dating, and verified provenance, the story must be viewed with caution. Artifacts falling intact from cliffs during storms are a favorite trope in sensational archaeology, and too frequently these accounts remain unverified and untraceable. We urge readers to treat this claim as unconfirmed and await transparent scientific reporting before accepting it as fact.

The moment of the discovery of the warrior’s tomb with the precious grave goods beside him.

Archaeological Museum of Chora in Pylos: A New Era for the Treasures of Nestor and the Griffin Warrior

October 3, 2025

The priceless finds from the so-called “Griffin Warrior” tomb will soon have a permanent home at the Archaeological Museum of Chora in Pylos. These extraordinary artifacts were unearthed in May 2015 during excavations on the hill of Ano Englianos, the site of the Palace of Nestor. Before their display, however, the museum must first undergo upgrades, modernization, and expansion to meet new standards. Toward this goal, the Greek Ministry of Culture’s Museum Council has just approved the preliminary museological plan for the redesigned exhibition.

The museum ranks among the most significant prehistoric museums in Greece. Its original displays featured finds from excavations carried out by distinguished archaeologists such as Spyridon Marinatos and Carl Blegen. Now, the addition of the unique treasures from the undisturbed Mycenaean warrior’s grave—believed to be a local leader around 1450 BC—will elevate its importance even further. The tomb was named after a rare ivory plaque depicting a griffin, discovered among roughly 1,400 objects: weapons, gold cups, hundreds of beads made of gold, carnelian, amethyst, and amber, a gold chain with pendant, dozens of seal stones, gold rings, and more. The grave was uncovered by University of Cincinnati archaeologists Professor Jack Davis and Dr. Sharon Stocker, who have been excavating in the area.

The seal stone found in the “Griffin Warrior” tomb depicting a warrior defeating his opponent.

Expansion and Donation
Located about 4.5 kilometers from the archaeological site of the Palace of Nestor—the best-preserved Mycenaean palace in mainland Greece—the Archaeological Museum of Chora was designed in 1955 by architect Patroklos Karantinos and opened its doors in 1967. Its exhibitions have long been considered among the most representative for tracing the development of Mycenaean civilization and understanding palace art and burial practices in Messenia.

Covering a total area of 792.11 square meters, the museum has seen various interventions over the decades. It closed in 2022 to allow for major building upgrades and a complete redesign of its archaeological displays. In addition to improvements to its three existing galleries, the project will also benefit from a significant donation: Mrs. Konstantina Kolokytha-Stamatelopoulou, a London resident with family roots in Messenia, has pledged €325,000. This gift funds both the design and construction of a new gallery to replace a nearby auxiliary building, thereby expanding the museum’s exhibition space.

The archaeological museum under construction

According to the museological plan, the new design will highlight the building’s original architectural principles: sequentially arranged exhibition halls, natural light filtering from the roof, and minimalist interior forms. The permanent collection will be displayed on the raised ground level, spanning four consecutive galleries (the three existing ones plus the new addition).

Visitors will enter through a gradual approach leading to the main entrance. The reception area will feature the ticket office and museum shop on either side of the entryway. Out of the roughly 2,660 objects presented in the museum’s original displays, about 1,000 items—either individually or grouped—will now be exhibited. These will include not only key pieces from earlier excavations but also newly unearthed finds from the past decade, which will be showcased on a permanent basis for the first time.


Read also: Unearthing Connections: The Griffin Warrior and the Horned Hilt of a Minoan-Type Sword


All photos courtesy: Adjaye Associates

A Mosque, Church & Synagogue Together: A New Symbol of Religious Coexistence in the UAE

September 30, 2025

In Abu Dhabi’s Saadiyat Island, a bold architectural and social experiment is taking shape: the Abrahamic Family House, a single complex that houses a mosque, a church, and a synagogue, built side by side to foster interfaith dialogue and unity. The project draws directly on the Document on Human Fraternity signed by Pope Francis and the Grand Imam of Al-Azhar in 2019, aiming to transform the ideal of religious tolerance into tangible space.

Designed by renowned architect David Adjaye, each worship structure is housed in its own concrete cube of identical dimensions, yet each cube features design elements unique to its faith tradition. The mosque, named Imam Al-Tayeb Mosque, features geometric latticework and architectural references aligned with Islamic tradition. The Moses Ben Maimon Synagogue, the first publicly built synagogue in the UAE, incorporates symbolic structural elements inspired by traditional Jewish motifs. Meanwhile, St. Francis Church, open to all Christian denominations, completes the triad.

All photos courtesy: Adjaye Associates

When it officially opened in February 2023, the Abrahamic Family House was hailed as a milestone in promoting religious pluralism in a region often marked by religious tension. It has already been used as a place for prayers, cultural events, and interfaith gatherings, reflecting the UAE’s desire to project an image of modern tolerance on its global stage.

Still, the project is not without challenges. Critics caution that while architecture can shape symbols, genuine interreligious harmony requires deeper social reforms and protections—especially given the UAE’s legal constraints on conversion from Islam or proselytization. Despite these tensions, the Abrahamic Family House stands as a physical assertion that coexistence and mutual respect among faiths can be manifested through space and shared commitment.

View fullsize imageye___-_imgi_65_w_120 (1).jpg
View fullsize imageye___-_imgi_3_AD0623_GRAND_FINALE_ADJAYE_3 copy.jpg
View fullsize Στιγμιότυπο οθόνης 2025-09-30 004833 (1).png

Orascom Construction PLC 

A New Gateway to Ancient Wonders: The GEM Walkway to the Pyramids Officially Completed

September 29, 2025

Egypt has unveiled a transformative project that is set to reshape how millions of visitors will experience one of the world’s most iconic heritage sites. The newly completed tourist walkway connecting the Grand Egyptian Museum (GEM) to the Giza Pyramids has been officially opened, marking a significant milestone in Egypt’s ongoing efforts to modernize its tourism infrastructure and preserve its ancient treasures.

A Seamless Connection Between Past and Present

Stretching between 1.27 and 1.45 kilometers, the GEM walkway has been designed as both a functional route and a symbolic link between Egypt’s two cultural giants: the newly built Grand Egyptian Museum, set to house over 100,000 artifacts including the full Tutankhamun collection, and the timeless pyramids of Giza, the last surviving wonder of the ancient world.

The project includes wide pedestrian pathways, landscaped areas, and an eco-friendly electric shuttle system, offering visitors a comfortable and accessible way to travel between the museum and the archaeological plateau. Illuminated at night with subtle, golden lighting, the walkway not only serves a practical role but also enhances the visual harmony of the entire site, blending modern design with the aura of antiquity.

Revitalizing Egypt’s Tourism Vision

According to Egypt’s Ministry of Tourism and Antiquities, the walkway is part of a broader redevelopment strategy to turn the Giza Plateau into a world-class cultural destination. Alongside the GEM’s long-awaited opening, the walkway is expected to reduce traffic congestion, better manage visitor flow, and improve the overall tourist experience, ensuring that the overwhelming scale and beauty of the pyramids can be enjoyed without the chaos that has sometimes plagued the site in the past.

International media have highlighted the project as a sweeping transformation of the Giza experience. Authorities hope this modernized infrastructure will help Egypt achieve record-breaking tourism numbers in the coming years, positioning Cairo as a global hub for cultural travel.

Tensions Behind the Transformation

Yet, as with any major development, the new walkway has not been without controversy. Local small business owners, horse and camel operators, and vendors who have traditionally earned their livelihoods near the pyramids worry that the streamlined system will reduce their access to tourists. Many fear that the government’s push for modernization may sideline these communities, replacing informal tourism economies with regulated, corporate-driven structures.

Critics argue that while the project elevates Egypt’s international image, it risks alienating those whose families have worked at the plateau for generations. Officials, however, stress that the changes are necessary to protect Egypt’s heritage from over-commercialization and mismanagement, while also ensuring safety and comfort for visitors.

A Bridge Between Eras

Ultimately, the GEM walkway represents more than just a new route — it is a metaphorical bridge connecting the grandeur of the ancient world with the aspirations of modern Egypt. For visitors, it offers an unprecedented way to encounter history, walking directly from the halls of the world’s largest archaeological museum into the shadow of the Great Pyramid. For Egypt, it stands as a bold statement of cultural renewal, an attempt to balance economic growth, heritage preservation, and the expectations of a global audience.

Whether hailed as progress or criticized as disruption, the walkway underscores the enduring power of the pyramids to inspire change. More than 4,500 years after they were built, these monuments continue to shape not only our view of the past but also the choices of the present — proving once again that the pyramids are not just relics of history but living symbols of identity, resilience, and ambition.

Tags News

Vestments Through the Ages: Tradition, Craft, and Cultural Continuity

September 15, 2025

In the study of material culture, few artefacts provide such a consistent thread through history as religious vestments. These garments have long served as more than ceremonial clothing—they are expressions of faith, continuity, and the social structures of their time. From early Christian tunics to elaborate medieval chasubles, the evolution of vestments reveals much about belief systems, craftsmanship, and cultural identity.

Liturgical Garments in Historical Context

Archaeological excavations and museum collections around the world have uncovered fragments of ancient textiles once used in sacred settings. From the Coptic vestments of Egypt to the richly embroidered garments of Byzantium, vestments offer a rare glimpse into the ceremonial and symbolic language of past societies. These artefacts are not only textiles; they are communicative devices—designed to signal hierarchy, season, and sacred function.

As these garments passed from generation to generation, often preserved within monasteries or cathedrals, they became part of a material dialogue between past and present. Their visual language—cross motifs, gold thread, Marian blues—remains strikingly consistent, even in contemporary ecclesiastical fashion.

Craftsmanship: A Living Tradition

The process of creating liturgical garments has always required specialised knowledge: not only in stitching or tailoring, but in iconography, theology, and symbology. While many ancient garments were handwoven using locally sourced fibres and dyes, today’s makers balance traditional methods with modern innovations.

For scholars and archaeologists, this continuity is especially interesting. It allows for a form of ethnographic observation in real-time—a way to witness how sacred craft evolves without breaking its link to the past. Contemporary vestment-makers still engage with age-old design choices, suggesting a deep-rooted conservatism in religious aesthetics that transcends fashion.

A Modern Lens on Ancient Practice

Today, producers of liturgical garments continue to uphold this lineage of sacred design. https://chasubles.com is one such example—drawing inspiration from historical styles while adapting to the needs of the modern Church. Their work reflects how centuries-old traditions can still inform current practice, blending precision embroidery with durable, ethically sourced fabrics.

While not artefacts in the archaeological sense, such contemporary creations mirror their historical counterparts in form, function, and spiritual significance. For archaeologists interested in ritual material culture, these modern vestments offer a unique opportunity to study “living heritage” in action.

Conclusion: Faith Woven in Time

The study of vestments offers more than aesthetic appreciation—it invites reflection on cultural continuity, ritual practice, and the enduring relationship between material and belief. Whether uncovered from a tomb or worn at Mass this Sunday, these garments serve as enduring links between generations of makers, worshippers, and communities. And in doing so, they remind us that tradition is not a relic—it’s a practice, still very much alive.

Albania’s First Monumental Roman Tomb: A 3rd–4th-Century Chamber with a Rare Bilingual Inscription

September 9, 2025

Archaeologists in northern Albania have uncovered a large Roman chamber tomb dating to the 3rd–4th century AD—the first monument of its kind ever documented in the country. The structure, discovered at Strikçan near Bulqiza in the historic Dibra region, measures roughly 9 by 6 meters with a burial chamber about 2.4 meters high. Its slabs bear inscriptions in Greek letters, including a rare bilingual dedication naming the deceased Gellianos and invoking Jupiter.

How the Discovery Happened

The find began with villagers who noticed unusually cut stones on a plateau. Acting on these reports, a team from Albania’s Institute of Archaeology opened test trenches in early August and soon identified a substantial underground construction sealed with massive limestone blocks. The excavation is directed in the field by Erikson Nikolli, who has provided the principal on-site statements to the press.

Architecture and Construction

The tomb is built from large, carefully dressed limestone slabs forming a stepped descent into a rectangular antechamber and inner chamber. At approximately 9 × 6 meters (29 × 19 ft) with a chamber height of ~2.4 m (8 ft), the monument is unusually spacious for the region and is being discussed by the team as a chamber tomb approaching the scale of a small mausoleum. Its plan and size distinguish it sharply from the simpler cist and pit graves more typical of northern Albania.

The Bilingual Inscription

Among the most significant features is an inscription cut in Greek letters that records the name Gellianos (Gellianus) and includes a dedication to Jupiter (Ζεύς/Ιουπίτερ). Officials have characterized it as a bilingual text (Greek and Latin), a rare phenomenon in Albania and the first ever recorded in the Dibra region. The surviving lines indicate both a personal memorial formula and a votive dedication, underscoring how Roman religious vocabulary could be framed in Greek epigraphic practice on the empire’s eastern Adriatic fringe. Full epigraphic publication is pending; additional inscribed stones recovered nearby may relate to a second monument.

Who Was Buried Here?

While osteological analysis and laboratory work remain to be reported, the scale, masonry quality, and decorated components point to a high-status burial—very likely a wealthy local notable with Roman citizenship or strong ties to the provincial elite. Nikolli has indicated that the chamber likely held two individuals, conceivably family members, with the named principal being Gellianos. The blend of Greek epigraphy, Latin theonym, and Roman funerary form reflects the cultural hybridity expected in a borderland community integrated into imperial networks.

Finds Inside the Tomb

Despite evidence that the tomb suffered at least two episodes of looting—one in antiquity and a later disturbance involving machinery—the team recovered noteworthy materials that survived the intrusions. These include fragments of textiles embroidered with gold thread, glass plates, and metal knives. Gold-thread fabric in particular is a strong status marker across the late Roman world, often associated with garments worn by elites at death. The fact that fragile objects like thin glass and textiles were preserved at all speaks to the tomb’s robust construction and stable microenvironment.

Why the Inscription Matters

The bilingual dedication is crucial for understanding language practice and identity in Roman Albania. Greek remained a dominant public epigraphic medium across the eastern Adriatic, but the invocation of Jupiter (rather than, say, Zeus alone) sits squarely within the Roman civic-religious idiom, suggesting self-presentation that was at once local and imperial. Officials emphasize that Dibra has yielded very few Roman-period inscriptions of any kind, and none with this bilingual profile, making the Strikçan text a reference point for future studies of provincial religion and onomastics in the region.

Comparanda and Rarity

Reports consistently describe the Strikçan monument as the first monumental Roman tomb documented in Albania. Other celebrated burials in the country—like the Illyrian royal tombs at Selcë e Poshtme—are earlier (Hellenistic) and architecturally different. For the Roman period proper, chamber tombs of this scale have not previously been recorded in Albanian archaeology, which explains the strong reaction from national authorities and the immediate plans for protection and presentation.

Public Presentation and Next Steps

The discovery quickly drew public attention. Albania’s culture ministry and the prime minister’s office circulated photographs and video from the site, while state broadcasters and international outlets amplified the news. Authorities intend to stabilize and conserve the structure and develop the location for controlled visitation, citing both heritage stewardship and cultural tourism. Meanwhile, the field team continues inscriptional analysis and artifact conservation, steps that will culminate in a technical report and, eventually, a peer-reviewed publication.

Interpreting Strikçan in Its Historical Landscape

Strikçan sits on a plateau that commands routes linking the Drin valley to passes toward North Macedonia. In late antiquity, such corridors knit together hinterland communities with coastal nodes on the Adriatic and Ionian seas, facilitating the flow of goods, people, and ideas. The tomb’s Roman funerary architecture combined with a Greek-lettered, Jupiter-focused text embodies this connective provinciality: the deceased (Gellianos) memorialized in a language legible across the eastern Mediterranean, yet inscribed with the central god of Rome’s public cult. This is precisely the kind of hybrid epigraphic habit scholars expect in regions where Latin power overlapped with long-standing Hellenic literacy.

What We Still Don’t Know

Key questions remain open pending analysis:

  • Text reconstruction. Only short excerpts have been released; a squeeze or high-resolution RTI record will be needed to establish the full lineation, letter heights, and restorations. (Officials have noted additional stones with writing from a nearby, possibly related monument.)

  • Burial practice. Whether the bodies were placed in sarcophagi, on biers, or in loculi is not yet reported. The chamber’s size and internal articulation may clarify this once excavation drawings are published.

  • Precise dating. The 3rd–4th-century window is based on architecture and finds; radiocarbon, textile analysis, and glass typology could narrow it.

Significance

For Albania, the Strikçan chamber is both a landmark discovery and a missing puzzle piece. It demonstrates that monumental Roman funerary architecture did reach the country’s northeastern uplands, and it provides a datable, inscribed context linking local elites to imperial religious vocabulary. For the wider Balkans, it offers a new datapoint for the diffusion of Roman mortuary forms into Greek-literate zones. And for epigraphy, it adds a rare bilingual text from a region where such inscriptions are sparse, enabling finer-grained discussion of language choice, identity, and ritual in provincial communities.

Tags News

An Intact Roman Altar from the Theater of Savatra: Epigraphic and Iconographic Insights

September 8, 2025

The discovery of an intact altar within the Roman theater of Savatra, located in central Anatolia, represents a significant addition to the corpus of material culture documenting the civic and religious life of Roman provincial settlements. Excavated in May 2025, the altar—remarkably preserved beneath collapsed masonry—dates to approximately the mid-2nd to early 3rd century CE. Its Greek inscription, associating the monument with the Aurelia dynasty, and its iconographic program depicting martial and religious motifs, illuminate both the political identity and cultural exchanges that characterized Savatra during the High Empire.

The Context of Discovery

The altar was recovered from beneath the theater’s collapsed superstructure, a circumstance that inadvertently safeguarded it from later spoliation or weathering. The context is significant: theaters in Roman Anatolia functioned not only as venues for performance but also as civic spaces where local elites displayed benefactions, imperial loyalty, and religious devotion. The placement of the altar within such a structure suggests a close interrelationship between entertainment, civic ritual, and public cult.

Epigraphic Evidence and the Aurelia Dynasty

The altar bears a Greek inscription naming members of the Aurelia dynasty, a family of local prominence. The use of Greek, rather than Latin, is consistent with the linguistic realities of the eastern provinces, where Hellenistic cultural traditions persisted under Roman political authority. Such inscriptions demonstrate the dual identity of local elites, who simultaneously projected Roman civic loyalty and continuity with the Hellenic heritage of Anatolia. The Aurelia inscription therefore provides evidence for strategies of self-representation within the civic aristocracy of Savatra, aligning local prestige with imperial structures.

Iconography: Military and Religious Convergence

The sculpted reliefs of the altar depict a soldier bearing a military standard and a victory wreath. These images can be read as affirmations of Rome’s martial authority and its divine sanction. The standard functions as a visual emblem of imperial military organization, while the wreath signifies victory consecrated by divine favor. Together, these motifs articulate the symbiosis of military and religious spheres, illustrating how civic identity in Savatra was embedded within the broader ideological framework of the Roman Empire. The altar thus embodies the dual obligations of local communities: fidelity to Rome’s military order and participation in the sacral discourse of victory and divine approval.

Savatra as a Provincial and Military Settlement

The evidence corroborates Savatra’s role as a Roman outpost along the empire’s central Anatolian frontier. Situated within the provincial landscape of Galatia or Lycaonia (depending on shifting administrative boundaries), the city combined military utility with cultural hybridity. The discovery of the altar underscores the permeability of cultural borders: local elites integrated Hellenistic linguistic traditions with Roman political and religious symbolism, thereby positioning Savatra as both a regional community and an integral node within imperial structures.

Conservation and Future Research

Plans for the restoration of both the altar and the theater are currently in progress. Conservation will not only secure the physical preservation of the monument but also enable detailed study of its epigraphic and iconographic features. Future scholarship may situate the altar within comparative frameworks, examining parallels in other Anatolian theaters where benefactions, dedications, and altars likewise articulated civic and imperial identities. The Savatra altar promises to become a key reference point in discussions of cultural interaction, military ideology, and the role of civic architecture in the Roman East.

The intact altar from the theater of Savatra constitutes an exceptional case study of how provincial communities in Roman Anatolia negotiated identity at the intersection of local tradition and imperial ideology. Through its Greek inscription and martial iconography, the monument demonstrates the coexistence of Hellenistic cultural continuity and Roman military-religious symbolism. As such, it enriches our understanding of Savatra’s civic and cultural landscape, highlighting the city’s significance as a site of cultural synthesis in the eastern Mediterranean world.

The Oldest Known Human Fossil that Blends Homo Sapiens and Neanderthal Species in Both Body and Brain

September 3, 2025

A recent study published in Journal of Anthropologie (July 2025) has dramatically reshaped our understanding of the encounters between Homo sapiens and Neanderthals. The research focuses on the skull of a five-year-old child, known as Skhul I, discovered almost a century ago in the Skhul Cave at Mount Carmel, Israel. Using modern CT imaging, scientists now argue that this fragment represents the earliest known human fossil that so strongly combines features of both species—externally resembling Homo sapiens, yet internally carrying unmistakable Neanderthal traits.

This revelation not only shifts the timeline of interbreeding between our species and Neanderthals but also forces us to reconsider the evolutionary story itself. It shows that our lineage has always been hybrid at its core, shaped by encounters, exchanges, and blending rather than by a neat succession of “pure” populations.

The Discovery of Skhul I: An Old Fossil Revisited

The remains of Skhul I were first unearthed nearly 90 years ago during excavations led by British archaeologists Dorothy Garrod and Theodore McCown. At the time, the child’s skeleton was classified as early Homo sapiens due to its rounded skull vault and other “modern” features. However, paleoanthropologists always noted a curious mix: some elements seemed less typical, hinting at Neanderthal affinities.

For decades, the specimen was treated as a borderline case—perhaps transitional, perhaps simply variation within early Homo sapiens. What it lacked was the precision of modern imaging technology. With the application of high-resolution CT scans, researchers were able to analyze the internal structures of the skull and jaw with unprecedented clarity. And what they found was nothing short of groundbreaking: beneath a Homo sapiens-like exterior lay a framework strikingly similar to that of Neanderthals.

The skull of Skhul I child showing cranial curvature typical of Homo sapiens. Credit: Tel Aviv University


A Hybrid Signature in Flesh and Bone

The new study highlights several features that point to this hybrid identity.

  • Cranial Vault: The rounded, globular shape is consistent with Homo sapiens, reflecting a brain form we associate with our species.

  • Vascular Impressions: The pattern of blood vessel channels inside the skull shows Neanderthal-like organization, revealing a deeper kinship with that lineage.

  • Mandible and Ear Structure: The lower jaw and the internal ear morphology strongly echo Neanderthal anatomy, diverging from the more gracile Homo sapiens form.

Taken together, these findings suggest Skhul I was not simply an early Homo sapiens child but the product of a much earlier intermingling between populations—long before the commonly accepted timeline.

Shattering the Chronology: Interbreeding Twice as Old as We Thought

Until recently, the dominant genetic narrative placed interbreeding between Homo sapiens and Neanderthals between 60,000 and 40,000 years ago, during the great migrations out of Africa. Ancient DNA studies showed that non-African humans carry about 2–4% Neanderthal DNA, a legacy of those encounters.

Skhul I, however, is dated to roughly 140,000 years ago. This pushes back the evidence of mixing by nearly 80,000 years. In other words, the first genetic exchanges between sapiens and Neanderthals occurred not in Europe or Central Asia during the last Ice Age, but much earlier, likely in the Levant—one of the most important crossroads of human evolution.

This child is thus the earliest tangible witness to a story of contact, union, and shared life between two species.

Body and Brain: A Mosaic of Evolution

Credit: Tel Aviv University

The most fascinating aspect of Skhul I is not just that it mixes traits but that it does so in both body and brain. Hybridization here is not superficial. It extends to the very architecture of the cranium—the space that houses cognition, perception, and social behavior.

This mosaic anatomy suggests that human evolution was never a simple sequence of one species replacing another. Instead, it was messy and interactive. Populations met, exchanged genes, shared ideas and technologies, and sometimes raised children who embodied both lineages. Skhul I represents one such child—living proof that identity in prehistory was blurred, fluid, and relational.

Cultural and Social Implications

The existence of Skhul I raises important questions about the nature of Neanderthal-sapiens interaction. Were these isolated encounters, or was there sustained coexistence? Archaeological evidence from the Mount Carmel region shows overlapping tool traditions and burial practices. This suggests that the two populations may have shared not only territory but aspects of culture.

If Homo sapiens and Neanderthals were raising children together 140,000 years ago, we must imagine families that combined traditions, perhaps languages, and worldviews. Such unions could have been rare and exceptional, or they could have been part of a long history of social entanglement. Either way, Skhul I is a window into the first “mixed” households of humanity.

Rethinking the Human Story

For decades, evolutionary narratives were dominated by a model of replacement: modern humans emerged in Africa and eventually outcompeted or exterminated Neanderthals. While genetic evidence has already softened this story by showing interbreeding, the discovery of Skhul I makes it impossible to ignore how deep and ancient this blending truly was.

The implication is that humanity is not a “pure” lineage at all but a palimpsest of interactions. We are hybrids by origin, carrying echoes of more than one hominin species in our DNA, bodies, and perhaps even in aspects of cognition and behavior.

This is not a weakness but a strength. Diversity and mixture gave us resilience, adaptability, and creativity. The blurred boundaries between sapiens and Neanderthals may have enriched both species, even if one lineage eventually disappeared.

Why This Child Matters Today

Skhul I is not merely an archaeological curiosity; it is a symbol. It reminds us that our history is a story of meeting, blending, and co-creation. At a time when human societies often obsess over purity, origins, and boundaries, this fossil offers a very different lesson: the human condition is hybrid. We are who we are because of encounters that crossed lines, defied categories, and forged unexpected kinships.

The child at Mount Carmel was buried with care, suggesting that even in deep prehistory, people understood the value of life, no matter how unusual its origins. That act of burial links us directly to them, across 140,000 years, in a chain of memory and belonging.

Conclusion: A Mirror of Our Shared Nature

The oldest known human fragment that combines both species so intensely in body and brain is more than a scientific discovery—it is a mirror. It reflects the truth that identity has always been complex, layered, and shared.

Skhul I challenges us to imagine prehistory not as a battlefield of species but as a landscape of encounters, families, and exchanges. It shows that evolution’s greatest tool was not isolation but connection. And in that light, our deepest legacy is not competition, but the capacity to meet the other and become something new together.

The child of Skhul, resting for 140,000 years in the earth of Mount Carmel, is now speaking again. What it tells us is simple but profound: humanity has always been a conversation, not a monologue.

In Paleontology Tags Studies, News

Rare statues discovered in the depths of the Mediterranean Sea are on display at the "Secrets of the Sunken City" exhibition, Alexandria, Egypt, Aug. 20, 2025. (AA Photo)

New Exhibition in Alexandria: Unveiling the “Secrets of the Sunken City”

August 31, 2025

On Friday, August 23, 2025, the National Museum of Alexandria inaugurated a landmark exhibition titled “Secrets of the Sunken City”, organized by Egypt’s Ministry of Tourism and Antiquities. The showcase brings to light breathtaking archaeological finds retrieved from the depths of the Mediterranean—objects that defy time and reveal hidden facets of ancient civilization.

The opening was attended by high-ranking officials, including Minister of Tourism Sharif Fathy and Alexandria’s Governor Ahmed Khaled, along with press delegations from Egypt and abroad.

During a press conference, Mohamed Ismail Khaled, Secretary General of the Supreme Council of Antiquities, emphasized that this marks the first temporary exhibition in Egypt dedicated entirely to underwater archaeology, and it will remain open for six months.

Rare statues discovered in the depths of the Mediterranean Sea are on display at the "Secrets of the Sunken City" exhibition, Alexandria, Egypt, Aug. 20, 2025. (AA Photo)

The display features 86 rare artifacts spanning different historical eras, gathered from multiple sites across Egypt. Most prominently, the finds come from underwater excavations in the Abu Qir Bay, north of Egypt, conducted since 2000 under the direction of the European Institute for Underwater Archaeology. In addition, the collection includes discoveries from the fabled Royal Palaces that lie submerged in Alexandria’s ancient harbor.

Among the highlights are statues, pottery, and exquisite jewelry—artifacts that reflect the cultural identity and artistic mastery of civilizations that thrived millennia ago in once-vibrant Mediterranean cities, now resting beneath the waves.

According to Egyptian media, more underwater treasures are expected to be recovered from Abu Qir Bay in the coming days.

Artifacts discovered in the depths of the Mediterranean Sea are on display at the "Secrets of the Sunken City" exhibition, Alexandria, Egypt, Aug. 20, 2025. (AA Photo)

This exhibition opens a rare and mesmerizing window into the ancient past, illuminating monumental chapters of history that remained hidden beneath the sea for centuries—silent, forgotten, and now vividly alive once more.

CREDITS:

COPYRIGHT / XZA ARCHITECTS
RENDERING / FAT TONY STUDIO

Cyprus Builds an Archaeological Museum for the Future: The Vision Behind the New Cyprus Museum in Nicosia

August 31, 2025

The New Cyprus Archaeological Museum, set to rise in Nicosia, is one of the most ambitious cultural projects in the region. With an expansive footprint of over 36,000 m², the museum was conceived through an international architectural competition won by XZA Architects under Theoni Xanthi’s direction. Now contracted to be built by the Iacovou‑Cyfield Joint Venture at a cost of approximately €144 million, construction began in January 2023, with anticipated completion by mid‑2026. The project includes a two‑year maintenance period and the possibility of extending it to ten years.

A Building in Three Strata: Memory, City, River

The architectural vision embodies a stratified structure floating above the ground, composed of three horizontal layers that function both symbolically and practically—Memory, City, and River.

  • Memory: The uppermost layer houses the main museum volumes, archiving and narrating Cyprus's rich archaeological legacy.

  • City: The intermediate level offers accessibility and integration with the urban fabric, bridging the museum to its civic surroundings.

  • River: The lowest layer connects to the adjacent Pedieos River and parks, blending cultural functions with everyday public life.

CREDITS:

COPYRIGHT / XZA ARCHITECTS
RENDERING / FAT TONY STUDIO

Inside, the exhibition design is intellectually as well as spatially layered into Topos, exploring early human connections to land; Sea, reflecting Cyprus's maritime affinities; and Cosmos, which traces interactions with Mediterranean cultures.

Architecture as Urban Catalyst and Cultural Forum

Strategically positioned at the crossroads of Nicosia’s medieval walls, the municipal gardens, and the Pedieos River Park, the museum’s triangular footprint responds to its multi-faceted context . The design fosters an open dialogue between interior and exterior—both literally and intuitively—with a ground-level public realm that invites pedestrian flows and creates seamless transitions into the urban green fabric.

A continuous roof canopy spans the building, unifying the indoors with outdoor plazas through carefully orchestrated light and shadow. Striated metal louvers filter sunlight dynamically, animating the architecture and reinforcing connections with the landscape . Inside, a central atrium, open courtyards, plazas, and vertical circulation cores puncture the museum's layers, providing rich spatial experiences and facilitating research, exhibitions, education, and public gatherings.

Significance and Impact: A Living Cultural Institution

CREDITS:

COPYRIGHT / XZA ARCHITECTS
RENDERING / FAT TONY STUDIO

More than a repository of archaeological treasures, the New Cyprus Museum is conceived as a living institution, a civic engine meant to ignite cultural interaction, academic dialogue, and community engagement. It is envisaged as both a national landmark and a vibrant urban hub—a place where locals, scholars, and visitors infuse past, present, and future with shared meaning.

When completed in 2026, this museum will not only safeguard Cyprus’s rich heritage but also redefine the role of cultural architecture in forging urban identity and fostering inclusive public life.

View fullsize imgi_3_New-Cyprus-Museum-Fereos-Architects3-768x527.jpg
View fullsize imgi_5_New-Cyprus-Museum-Fereos-Architects5-768x513.jpg
View fullsize imgi_6_New-Cyprus-Museum-Fereos-Architects6-768x498.jpg
View fullsize imgi_7_New-Cyprus-Museum-Fereos-Architects7-768x515.jpg
View fullsize imgi_10_New-Cyprus-Museum-Fereos-Architects10-768x876.jpg
View fullsize imgi_12_New-Cyprus-Museum-Fereos-Architects12-768x507.jpg
View fullsize imgi_15_New-Cyprus-Museum-Fereos-Architects15-768x384.jpg
View fullsize imgi_28_New-Cyprus-Museum-Fereos-Architects28-768x702.jpg

Archaeologists Discover One of the World’s Oldest Streets in Neolithic Anatolia, Nearly 10,000 Years Old

August 31, 2025

Almost 10,000 years ago—long before the emergence of cities—people in central Anatolia were already experimenting with new ways of shaping their living environment. Recent excavations at Canhasan 3 Höyük in Turkey’s Karaman province have brought to light one of the world’s earliest known streets, dating back around 9,750 years, predating the more famous settlement of Çatalhöyük by roughly seven and a half centuries.

A Planned Passageway in the Neolithic World

Archaeologists uncovered a deliberately designed corridor between houses—an astonishing find that stands among the earliest examples of a “street” in human history. This discovery disrupts the long-standing perception of Neolithic life as clusters of tightly packed, roof-accessed dwellings with little space between them, a pattern epitomized by Çatalhöyük. Instead, Canhasan 3 reveals a community that consciously left open areas between structures, reflecting an early attempt at spatial planning, shared pathways, and communal organization.

Excavations and Findings

The work is conducted under the “Heritage for the Future Project” of Turkey’s Ministry of Culture and Tourism, led by Assoc. Prof. Adnan Baysal of Ankara University. His team discovered a clear passage separating two dwellings—an intentional layout rarely encountered in Neolithic Anatolia.

At Canhasan 3 Mound in Karaman, archaeologists uncovered one of the earliest known streets of the Neolithic Age, dating back 750 years before the 9,000-year-old Çatalhöyük. Credit: DHA


“This is a remarkable surprise,” Baysal explained. “Unlike Çatalhöyük’s compact house blocks, Canhasan 3 demonstrates a very different vision of architecture. These spaces may have served as passageways, livestock corridors, or perhaps the earliest form of a street. Whatever their exact function, the very existence of such gaps is extraordinary for this period.”

The researchers also observed variations in hearth placement compared to Çatalhöyük, suggesting diverse cultural practices among the Neolithic communities of Central Anatolia.

A Settlement That Endured for Millennia

Canhasan is not a single mound but a complex of three (Canhasan 1, 2, and 3), documenting continuous human occupation from the Pre-Pottery Neolithic through the Bronze and Iron Ages. For thousands of years, this fertile area supported communities that witnessed the advent of agriculture, animal domestication, and permanent architecture.

Baysal attributes the site’s longevity to its abundant water sources and rich environment. Excavations have revealed bones of aurochs, fish, and waterfowl, indicating a wetland landscape with plentiful resources. Ongoing analysis of plant remains is expected to shed further light on early farming practices.

Why This Discovery Matters

The identification of a street-like feature at Canhasan 3 pushes the history of urban-style planning much further back than previously thought. Streets are often seen as markers of social complexity and collective organization, and finding such an element nearly 10,000 years ago radically changes our understanding of early communities.

Moreover, the contrast with Çatalhöyük emphasizes that Neolithic societies in Anatolia were far from uniform. Different groups pursued distinct solutions to issues of mobility, safety, and social interaction.

Canhasan’s Wider Importance

Though long overshadowed by Çatalhöyük, Canhasan 3 is emerging as a crucial site for reconstructing the diversity of early settlement models. Archaeologists point to its significance in several areas:

  • Evidence of early spatial planning and proto-street formation

  • Continuity of settlement over millennia

  • Abundant environmental and ecological data

  • A cultural bridge between the Pre-Pottery and Pottery Neolithic

For these reasons, Canhasan 3 holds value not only for Turkish archaeology but also for global research on human social development.

Looking Ahead

Excavations continue with the aim of learning more about the daily lives of Canhasan’s inhabitants. Researchers hope to understand whether these early streets served purely functional purposes or whether they carried symbolic or communal meaning.

As Baysal notes: “By carefully studying the architecture, artifacts, and ecological remains, we can reconstruct how people lived, farmed, and interacted with their environment. Canhasan 3 shows us a unique Neolithic society—different from Çatalhöyük but equally vital for understanding our shared human past.”

With its deep historical layers and groundbreaking discoveries, Canhasan 3 is gaining recognition as a landmark of Anatolia—one of the places where the earliest experiments in community planning, agriculture, and settlement design took root nearly 10 millennia ago.

Tags News

Restoring the Glory of Amphipolis: The Kasta Tomb's Transformation into a Visitor-Focused Museum

August 29, 2025

Amphipolis, in Central Macedonia, Greece, holds one of the most breathtaking archaeological sites of the Hellenistic world—the Kasta Tomb (Τύμβος Καστά). Dating to the late 4th century BCE, this grand tumulus is the largest of its kind in Greece and eclipses even the famed burial mound of Philip II in Vergina.


Watch this spectacular panoramic video from the Kasta Tomb in Amphipolis, Greece


Uncovered progressively—first in the 1960s and more dramatically from 2012 onward—the mound surrounds a sophisticated tomb complex with three vaulted chambers, ornate mosaics (notably depicting the abduction of Persephone), sphinx statues, caryatids, and a marble perimeter wall nearly 158 m in diameter. Human remains—including those of a woman, two men, an infant, and fragments of another—have fueled scholarly debate, with some proposing the tomb belongs to Hephaestion, a close companion of Alexander the Great.

The New Museum Vision & Infrastructure Enhancements

In August 2025, the Greek Ministry of Culture announced an ambitious plan to transform the site into a world-class archaeological destination. The core of this plan is the creation of a partially underground (under‑scooped) exhibition and visitor center near the Kasta Tomb, purposefully designed to blend into the natural environment with minimal visual intrusion.

Key features of the project include:

  • Visitor Infrastructure: The development encompasses entrance zones, parking, restroom facilities, shelter, walkways, and strategically placed viewing platforms to guide the flow of visitors in small groups—important given the tomb’s confined interior space.

  • Exhibition Complex: Spanning approximately 694 m², the semi‑subterranean building will house two exhibition halls and an open-air gallery:

    1. Hall 1: Traditional displays of key artifacts (e.g., the sphinx head, wings, funerary door, friezes), presented with universally accessible interpretive labels.

    2. Hall 2: Immersive digital applications offering virtual interaction with the tomb and its archaeological context.

    3. Open‑air colonnade: Offers panoramic views of the tomb and its preserved marble perimeter, allowing visitors to appreciate the monument holistically.

  • Landscape Integration & Sustainability: The building’s architecture follows bioclimatic principles and a low environmental footprint—employing planted roofs, earth‑covered surfaces, and energy‑efficient systems.

  • Enhanced Visitor Experience: The aim is to offer a seamless, educational experience that interweaves natural beauty, historical depth, and modern storytelling techniques while ensuring full accessibility for people with disabilities.

  • Financials & Timeline: The project is backed by a budget exceeding €10 million, funded via the Regional Operational Programme of Central Macedonia (ESPA 2021–2027) and national cultural budgets. The goal is to complete construction and open the site to the public by 2027.

View fullsize imgi_8_f5.png
View fullsize imgi_10_f1.png
View fullsize imgi_7_f7.png
View fullsize imgi_11_f2.png
View fullsize imgi_3_timvos-kasta-mousio-maketo.png
View fullsize imgi_5_f3.png
View fullsize imgi_228_The-Kasta-tumulus-monumental-complex.jpg
View fullsize imgi_230_vlcsnap-00001.jpg
View fullsize imgi_235_30665674.Άποψη-του-Τύμβου-Κάστα-στην-Αμφίπολη.jpg

Bridging History and the Modern Visitor

This thoughtful redevelopment honors the archaeological significance of Amphipolis—not only as the resting place of potentially prominent Hellenistic figures but also as a strategic city that connected fertile Macedonian lands with the southern Greek states, and later, East with West—praised by ancient historians Herodotus and Thucydides.

Visitors can soon explore the tomb and its surroundings within a curated narrative journey—from lush terraces and digital storytelling to constantly shifting perspectives of a marvellous monument. This initiative promises to set a new benchmark for archaeological tourism by intertwining accessibility, interpretation, and preservation.

Opinion and Outlook

This is an inspiring project—one that boldly foregrounds accessibility, visitor welfare, and sensory immersion, without compromising on the integrity and dignity of the site. The minimal, earth-embedded architecture respects the landscape, while the phased introduction of digital technologies invites global audiences to grasp the tomb’s layers of meaning. By 2027, Amphipolis will not only reclaim its archaeological prominence but also serve as a modern template in musealization and heritage management.

Tags News
Older Posts →
Featured
imgi_59_41597_2025_6140_Fig6_HTML (1).png
Nov 8, 2025
Mapping the Empire: New Digital Atlas Reveals Rome’s Vast Hidden Road Network
Nov 8, 2025
Read More →
Nov 8, 2025
imgi_44_4487.jpg
Nov 7, 2025
The Marbles — A British Documentary Rekindles the Debate Over the Parthenon Sculptures
Nov 7, 2025
Read More →
Nov 7, 2025
megalo-mouseio-kairo-ekgainia (1).jpg
Nov 1, 2025
Watch Live: The Opening of the Grand Egyptian Museum in Cairo
Nov 1, 2025
Read More →
Nov 1, 2025
1000008257.jpg
Oct 23, 2025
Archaeologists Discover 'Perfectly Preserved' 70-Million-Year-Old Dinosaur Egg in Argentina
Oct 23, 2025
Read More →
Oct 23, 2025
hq720.jpg
Oct 20, 2025
Louvre museum robbery: how the thieves broke in, what they stole and what happens next
Oct 20, 2025
Read More →
Oct 20, 2025
imgi_254_maxresdefault (1).jpg
Oct 18, 2025
“Who’s Afraid of the Ancient Greeks?” – A Defense of Greek Civilization from MMC Brussels
Oct 18, 2025
Read More →
Oct 18, 2025
read more

Powered by The archaeologist