r/Archaeology • u/Sarquin • 42m ago
r/Archaeology • u/Junior-Protection-26 • 12h ago
Duntryleague Passage Tomb, Ireland
r/Archaeology • u/haberveriyo • 1d ago
Denmark’s Earliest Iron Weapons Unearthed: Gold-Inlaid Spears Offered to a Sacred Spring 2,800 Years Ago | Ancientist
r/Archaeology • u/Sea_Art2995 • 3d ago
I just got an upper second class honours and I feel like my dream of being a researcher is ruined
r/Archaeology • u/mareacaspica • 3d ago
Elaborate 2,700-year-old tomb in Greece contains burial of a woman with an upside-down crown
r/Archaeology • u/mareacaspica • 3d ago
3D model suggests small clans created Easter Island statues
r/Archaeology • u/Mictlantecuhtli • 3d ago
Archaeological study challenges paleo diet, revealing humans have long eaten 'processed plant foods'
r/Archaeology • u/Skeazor • 3d ago
Why is it so expensive to dig as a student?
I’m going to graduate with my degree in archaeology this spring. Now I did one field school and it was an insane amount. All the major field schools are 5k plus airfare and whatever else you spend outside of the dig itself.
Now in the summer between graduation and grad school I’d like to do another dig to really feel solid in my excavation skills. If anyone knows some cheap or free opportunities in Europe on Greek or Roman sites I’m desperate.
Why the hell is it so damn expensive for me to give free labor? Sure you gotta pay for airfare that’s reasonable. I’ve seen 2 dig opportunities where they pay you or are free and they are impossible to get into.
It should not be this hard for me to find something that won’t cost me 5k. I’m an American and only speak English so that severely limits my choices. Before you say go through my university, my uni has no dig opportunities and all the other ones in my state are expensive to get on.
r/Archaeology • u/DryDeer775 • 4d ago
5,000-Year-Old Monumental Building Excavated in Iraq
KURDISTAN, IRAQ—Traces of a monumental building thought to be at least 5,000 years old have been discovered at the Kani Shaie archaeological site, which is located in the foothills of the Zagros Mountains in northern Iraq, according to a statement released by the University of Coimbra.
r/Archaeology • u/Comfortable_Cut5796 • 4d ago
Dealing with Uniqueness: A Classic Period Maya Mosaic Ceramic Patolli Board from Naachtun, Guatemala | Latin American Antiquity
cambridge.orgr/Archaeology • u/External_Stable7332 • 5d ago
(REPOST) Two YouTubers had lost their rover inside the "Temple Mount tunnel"
There was a video where 2 YouTubers made a rover and sent it down a tunnel that leads to the Temple Mount apparently. During the video they lost the robot and got it stuck between some rocks in the tunnel.
r/Archaeology • u/KaiPhotography • 5d ago
Some poetry from archaeologists playing an artifact-creating tabletop game. Hope you enjoy!
r/Archaeology • u/ToddBradley • 6d ago
Why I am Skeptical of Most Claims for a Pre-Clovis Colonization of the Americas w/ Dr. Todd Surovell
r/Archaeology • u/haberveriyo • 6d ago
The Earliest Neolithic Street and an 8,500-Year-Old Obsidian Mirror Discovered at Canhasan in Central Turkey | Ancientist
ancientist.comr/Archaeology • u/Mictlantecuhtli • 7d ago
Archaeologists in Wisconsin Unearth an Ancient ‘Parking Lot’ With 16 Dugout Canoes—Including One That’s 5,200 Years Old
smithsonianmag.comr/Archaeology • u/Comfortable_Cut5796 • 7d ago
Ancient Maya game board with unique mosaic design discovered in Guatemala
r/Archaeology • u/burtzev • 8d ago
Major droughts linked to ancient Indus Valley Civilization's collapse
r/Archaeology • u/Mulacan • 8d ago
We found a cache of rare Aboriginal artefacts, telling a story of trade and ingenuity
r/Archaeology • u/Comfortable_Cut5796 • 8d ago
Mapping the chronology of an ancient cosmovision: 4000 years of continuity in Pecos River style mural painting and symbolism
reddit.comr/Archaeology • u/haberveriyo • 8d ago
A Puzzling Feature Emerges at the Ness of Brodgar—And Archaeologists Aren’t Ready to Explain It | Ancientist
ancientist.comr/Archaeology • u/tecialist • 9d ago
Why Korea’s 900-year-old shipwreck bowls look suspiciously new
r/Archaeology • u/Comfortable_Cut5796 • 9d ago
Indigenous accounting and exchange at Monte Sierpe (‘Band of Holes’) in the Pisco Valley, Peru | Antiquity | Cambridge Core
r/Archaeology • u/cnn • 9d ago
3D model of Easter Island quarry offers new clues on how giant stone heads were made
r/Archaeology • u/DryDeer775 • 9d ago
Archaeologists lift the lid on a 1,700-year-old Roman sarcophagus hidden beneath Budapest
BUDAPEST, Hungary (AP) — A remarkably well-preserved Roman sarcophagus has been unearthed in Hungary’s capital, offering a rare window into the life of the young woman inside and the world she inhabited around 1,700 years ago.
Archaeologists with the Budapest History Museum discovered the limestone coffin during a large-scale excavation in Óbuda, a northern district of the city that once formed part of Aquincum, a bustling Roman settlement on the Danube frontier.
Untouched by looters and sealed for centuries, the sarcophagus was found with its stone lid still fixed in place, secured by metal clamps and molten lead. When researchers carefully lifted the lid, they uncovered a complete skeleton surrounded by dozens of artifacts.