Two ancient clay tablets from Iraq contain details of a "lost" Canaanite language.
The writing system of the Kushans, which is still unknown, was in use within Central Asia between the years 200 BCE and 700 CE.
A stone head discovered at the bottom of Lake Nemi in Italy's Lazio area may have belonged to one of Caligula's Nemi ships.
The Tel Shimron excavations in Israel have recently revealed a remarkable architectural marvel dating back to 1,800 BC – the well preserved mudbrick structure of hidden passageway.
Like modern humans, Neanderthal made and used bone tools for their daily needs.
An unknown species of human apparently mastered obsidian, something it had been thought only occurred in the Stone Age.
Two extremely large flint knives, described as giant handaxes, were amongst the unearthed artifacts.
The discovery of human artifacts made from a long-extinct sloth bones pushes back the estimated date of human settlement in Brazil to 25,000 to 27,000 years.
New skeletal DNA analysis proves that who first called themselves English had origins in Germany, Denmark, and the Netherlands.
Hundreds of elite Anglo-Saxon women were buried with mysterious ivory rings. Now, researchers know the ivory came from African elephants living about 4,000 miles away from England.