In a rather more earthbound initiative, Google Maps staff in Mexico have pedalled tricycles mounted with cameras around 30 pre-Hispanic sites to…
Clay cylinders from the Jordan Valley, traditionally interpreted as 8,000-year-old ritual ‘phallic objects’, have been reassessed as the earliest-known fire-drills. There is…
Previously thought to be little more than hillfort, is this actually the first Iron Age city north of the Alps?…
Excavations in Croatia have uncovered evidence of Palaeolithic artists who were modelling ceramic figurines at the end of the last Ice Age…
We are proud to share with you the first published photos of the House of the Telephus Relief at Herculaneum since archaeologists…
Singapore is a 21st-century success story. But, asks Tom St John Gray, at what cost to its heritage?…
“Red Blood filled her arteries, and her flesh was still malleable, with no sign of rigor mortis.”…
The enormous wealth generated by the tourist industry is placing increasing demands on our cultural heritage. Richard Hodges chats with Ricardo Agurcia,…
CWA’s Editor in Chief, Andrew Selkirk introduces the editor of Biblical Archaeology Review – the man who broke the embargo on the…
"You really wouldn't want a vampire in the house, trailing blood and gore, and smelling putrid"…
Half a dozen of us stood or crouched in the faint dawn light on either side of the great stone doorway, just…
By Melissa A Vogel University Press of Florida, £64.50 ISBN 978-0813037967 This is the first English-language work on the Casma, a…