
200 ancient ‘giant’ skeletons unearthed in Cayuga, Canada
Five or six feet below the ground, were unearthed two hundred giant skeletons nearly all intact in their well conditions.

Five or six feet below the ground, were unearthed two hundred giant skeletons nearly all intact in their well conditions.

People have witnessed an unworldly phenomenon within the bridge premises.

The tomb of the Eighteenth Dynasty king Tutankhamun (c.1336–1327 BC) is world-famous because it is the only royal tomb from the Valley of the Kings that was discovered relatively intact.…

Piranha, an extremely predatory fish with sharp teeth and powerful jaws that always illustrate itself a dreadful creature from a gruesome Hollywood scene as the picture depicts below. Yes, they…

Approximately 2975 years ago, Pharaoh Siamun governed over Lower Egypt while the Zhou Dynasty ruled in China. Meanwhile, in Israel, Solomon awaited his succession to the throne after David. In the region that we now know as Portugal, the tribes were nearing the conclusion of the Bronze Age. Notably, in the present-day location of Odemira on the southwest coast of Portugal, an unusual and uncommon phenomenon had occurred: an extensive number of bees perished inside their cocoons, their intricate anatomical features impeccably preserved.

Have you ever heard of the legend of the Flying Dutchman? Perhaps yes! A legend so famous that it has been replicated in literature, in opera and has even been…

DNA from ancient burial unlocks the mystery of 5,000-year-old lost culture of ancient India.

Hidden from our eyesight, there are 44 of the Earth's most peculiar inhabitants – creatures that seem to have borrowed their traits from distant galaxies.

Among these bones uncovered from an extensive ancient burying ground, were some belonging to men of gigantic structure.

The Kensington Runestone is a 202-pound (92 kg) slab of greywacke covered in runes on its face and side. A Swedish immigrant, Olof Ohman, reported that he discovered it in 1898 in the largely rural township of Solem, Douglas County, Minnesota, and named it after the nearest settlement, Kensington.