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A retired U.K. geologist claims he's found Bronze Age-era artifacts in his backyard and surrounding areas, including blades and axes. "Finding the arrowhead was the starting point," he said.
2,000-year-old statues discovered that archaeologists say could "rewrite history" 01:00 Skeletal remains and skull fragments of two Bronze Age women were found at a construction site in the U.K.
An analysis of the exceptionally well preserved remains of a Bronze Age village reveals the cozy domesticity of life in Britain 2,850 years ago. CNN values your feedback 1.
Humans Extremely rare Bronze Age wooden tool found in English trench. In a wetland on the south coast of England, archaeologists dug up one of the oldest and most complete wooden tools ever found ...
Scientists working at the Somló Hill site, a volcanic outcrop on the country’s western end, discovered a number of artifacts dating from the Late Bronze Age (1450–800 B.C.) and Early Iron Age ...
A 4-year-old boy accidentally knocked over a Bronze Age jar while visiting a museum in Israel, shattering the priceless artifact that had remained intact for at least 3,500 years.
It was once a small and seemingly cozy late Bronze Age village. A settlement of five circular dwellings was built on stilts about 6.5 feet above a rambling river in eastern England.
[Related: Details of life in Bronze Age Mycenae could lie at the bottom of a well.] The cauldrons show signs of wear and tear from use, but also signs of extensive repair.
The Bronze Age settlement at Must Farm, unearthed by University of Cambridge archaeologists in Whittlesey, Peterborough, has been described as a “time capsule.” ...
Archaeologists Find 3,000-Year-Old Sword So Well Preserved It ‘Almost Still Shines’ The Bronze Age artifact was discovered in a grave during excavations in southern Germany ...
Amid highway construction, archaeologists uncovered a 3,000-year-old Late Bronze Age settlement and cremation cemetery, as announced by the Suffolk City Council in the United Kingdom.
Much of what is known about the nature of late Bronze Age trade is based on two shipwrecks excavated in southern Turkey — the first at Cape Gelidonya in 1960, and the second at Uluburun from ...