ZME Science on MSN
What Have the Romans Ever Done for Us? Made Us Sicker, Apparently
Pitt looked at 372 non-adult skeletons (mostly infants and toddlers) and 274 adult females from 24 different sites across ...
The Independent reports that archaeologists have discovered infant skeletons from the Roman period bearing significant "negative health markers," pointing to widespread suffering among urban ...
By looking at mother-infant experiences together, we can observe the long-lasting impact urbanization has on the health of ...
In 2020, a farmer in England's Rutland county notified authorities about the possibility that there was a Roman villa located ...
Beneath an office building in London, the first Roman civic basilica appears, revealing the lost ancient town hall of ...
New research suggests that the illustrations may have been based on "Phrygians," a tragedy by the Athenian playwright ...
Two Roman swords found in Gloucestershire reveal a hidden settlement dating back 2,000 years and the possible remains of a ...
It has been revealed that the skeletal remains of a man from Roman-era Britain show he was bitten by a large cat like a lion, meaning that he may well have been a combatant who died in a gladiator ...
The identity of a Roman-era individual found in southern England has finally been resolved after scientists at the Natural ...
New research is revealing the remarkable story of one of Britain’s most enigmatic archaeological finds - a Roman gladiator helmet, discovered buried in a field in East Anglia. The artefact, which will ...
Smithsonian Magazine on MSN
Archaeologists Digging Beneath Britain's Houses of Parliament Discover 6,000-Year-Old Flint Artifacts and a 2,000-Year-Old Roman Altar Fragment
At the Palace of Westminster in London, which houses Britain’s Parliament, archaeologists have unearthed an array of artifacts, ranging from a 19th-century beer jug to 6,000-year-old prehistoric flint ...
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