Tree ring evidence of an ancient solar storm enables scientists to pinpoint the exact year of Norse settlement
Excavations at a site in northern Israel are at the heart of a debate about the species' migrations
In the frigid Baltic Sea, archaeologists probing the surprisingly well-preserved remains of a revolutionary warship are seeing the era in a new way
Humans likely sported clothes made of jackal, fox and wildcat skins some 120,000 years ago
Three thousand years ago desert dwellers fatally stabbed and bashed each other, possibly due to diminishing resources
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The ancient plants at the heart of the conflict are essential to science—and might hold clues to new superfoods
When news broke worldwide of an incredible find in Colombia, local experts and guides say their knowledge was misrepresented
A mysterious Middle Pleistocene skull from a Chinese well has inspired debate among paleoanthropologists
Mesopotamians turned a community tomb on the Euphrates into a battle monument
Dramatic new discoveries in the ancient Egytptian burial ground. A special report produced with Smithsonian Channel
Forty years later, archaeologists look back at what the first Indiana Jones movie got wrong about their profession
A new study of fish remains deepens scholars' understanding of how the dietary laws came to be
Two authors ask readers to change their understanding of what science is and who gets to participate
The centuries-old history of titanium white
The unearthing of a tiny child suggests Africa’s Stone Age humans sometimes practiced funerary rites and had symbolic thoughts about death
Genome sequencing shows some individuals share family ties with surprising populations, and all boast plenty of Neanderthal relatives
Check out tapestry weaving, lunch with a curator and virtual study tours produced by the world’s largest museum-based educational program
Scholar Monica Green combined the science of genetics with the study of old texts to reach a new hypothesis about the plague
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