Learn more about what Bronze Age burial sites reveal about how these ancient societies navigated everyday life.
Credit: Zde, Wikimedia Commons, Public Domain Ancient DNA is helping scientists understand the origins of Bronze Age ...
The Bronze Age in ancient Greece was a pivotal era that laid the foundation for the rich tapestry of Hellenic civilization.
Evidence from rare burials shows Late Bronze Age Central European communities adapted through exchange, shifting diets, and ...
A new interdisciplinary study published in Nature Communications provides the first detailed insights, from a biomolecular ...
Bronze Age residents of what is now Estonia ate a surprisingly similar diet regardless of their overall living standards — ...
Recent research suggests that many of the Bronze Age people buried in Seddin, Germany, were not locals but came from outside the region. While archaeologists had previously uncovered artifacts from ...
We have no written evidence about how people lived in Europe during the Bronze Age (2300–800 BCE), so archaeologists piece together their world from the artefacts and materials they left behind.
While analyzing livestock DNA from Arkaim, an international team that includes University of Arkansas archaeologist Taylor Hermes detected Yersinia pestis in ...
Insights into the lives of people in the Late Bronze Age: Interdisciplinary analyses (DNA, isotopes) shed light on the ancestry, mobility, diet, health, and burial practices of people in Central ...