News
Discover WildScience on MSN16h
Bronze Age Seafaring: Navigating the Open Sea of ScandinaviaThe Bronze Age cultures of Scandinavia were deeply interconnected, with evidence of shared artifacts, burial systems, and architectural styles between Denmark and Norway. Recent studies have revealed ...
Nick Angeloff, an archaeologist at Cal Poly Humboldt, has called the developments at Gradishte a once-in-a-lifetime discovery ...
People living in Bronze Age-era Denmark may have been able to travel to Norway directly over the open sea, according to a ...
open image in gallery Bronze Age 'international' mystery: Some evidence suggests that St Michael's Mount in Cornwall may have been a key part of the trade route linking north-west Europe and the ...
Shahr-i Sokhta, meaning ‘Burnt City’, is located at the junction of Bronze Age trade routes crossing the Iranian plateau. The remains of the mudbrick city represent the emergence of the first complex ...
These findings indicate that contact between ancient communities on both sides of the Arabian Gulf resulted in shared musical traditions central to rituals and religious beliefs, Douglas’ team says.
These trade routes have left a lasting imprint in cultures ... But to trade wine, it had to be transported. In the Bronze Age, wine was first carried in amphorae – large, bulbous pottery vases ...
Sea voyages from Denmark to Norway may have been possible across open waters, though sticking to the coastline was likely the ...
People living in Bronze Age-era Denmark may have been able to travel ... following a 700-kilometer route across Denmark, up the coast of Sweden and back down to southwestern Norway.
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results