People gather to mark the two-year anniversary of the country's catastrophic earthquake ...
Experts just found a 3D map that was carved into quartz sandstone likely 13,000 years ago. Located within the famed Segognole ...
A scientific study with important implications for archaeology in Britain and France was published last week ... An alternative pattern, practised on Early Bronze Age Orkney, is patrilocality, where ...
Skeletal remains and skull fragments of two Bronze Age women were found at a construction site in the U.K. Their remains were found in Kent at a building site slated for 41 homes along with animal ...
If historic accounts were more honest, the find would have been received as a confirmation of the role of women in iron age Britain. Instead, it is being framed as a breakthrough that contradicts ...
LAND was inherited through the female line in Iron Age Britain and husbands moved to live with their wife’s community, according to a new study. A team of geneticists from Trinity College Dublin ...
Researchers have uncovered genetic evidence suggesting that ancient Celtic societies in Iron Age Britain were matrilineal and matrilocal, with women holding status and influence. A study published ...
Female family ties were at the heart of social networks in Celtic society in Britain before the Roman invasion, a new analysis suggests. Genetic evidence from a late Iron Age cemetery shows that ...
Patrilocality is the most common system observed in European Neolithic, Copper and Bronze Age sites ... of 57 individuals buried in Iron Age cemeteries associated with Durotrigian communities in ...
An interpolated map showing the distribution of British Bronze Age ancestry across Iron Age Britain. The highlighted area was inhabited by the Durotriges tribe, and it has the lowest levels of ...
the study identified traces of migrations to the southern coast of England during the Iron Age, raising new questions about the arrival of the Celtic language in Britain. While it has been suggested ...
George Etheredge for The New York Times Towering over the middle of the hall is Nick Cave’s new bronze sculpture “Amalgam (Origin),” a barefoot figure wrapped in flowers and leaves that ...
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