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    About our Archaeology news

    Latest news on archaeology, covering digs, excavations, ancient discoveries, artefacts, fossils, Pompeii, Egypt, Stonehenge, and the science of the human past.

    Archaeology is the systematic study of human history through the excavation and analysis of ancient sites, artefacts, structures, and biological remains. From Neolithic settlements to Bronze Age burial mounds, Roman villas to medieval shipwrecks, the discipline spans every continent and era, offering an irreplaceable window into how our ancestors lived, traded, believed, and died. Major institutions including the British Museum, the Smithsonian, and national heritage bodies around the world fund and oversee thousands of active dig sites at any given time.

    Recent years have seen a cascade of landmark finds. In 2025, archaeologists announced the discovery of the tomb of Pharaoh Thutmose II in Egypt's Valley of the Kings, the first royal pharaonic tomb found there since Tutankhamun's in 1922. Excavations at Pompeii continued to yield extraordinary results, including a large painted frieze depicting Dionysian mystery rituals. A Neolithic amphitheatre-like structure at Karahantepe in Turkey, a Viking boat burial in Norway, and the first complete ancient Egyptian genome sequenced by researchers at the University of Liverpool further illustrated the breadth and pace of modern discovery.

    Technology is reshaping archaeological fieldwork at speed. LiDAR (Light Detection and Ranging) scanning now allows researchers to map entire buried landscapes in hours, revealing lost cities and ceremonial complexes beneath jungle canopies. Artificial intelligence accelerates artefact classification, ancient DNA analysis, and predictive modelling of dig sites. These tools, however, bring ethical questions: debates around Indigenous consent, data sovereignty, and who controls knowledge about ancestral remains have intensified as remote-sensing techniques allow surveying without physical access to a site.

    The question of cultural heritage and repatriation remains one of archaeology's most contested issues. Museums across Europe and North America continue to face demands from source countries for the return of looted artefacts, with high-profile cases involving items held in institutions such as the British Museum and the Louvre. Illegal excavation and the trade in stolen antiquities also threaten irreplaceable sites, particularly across the Middle East, North Africa, and South Asia. The field is increasingly grappling with whose history archaeology tells, and who has the right to excavate, study, and display it.

    As a discipline, archaeology is over 200 years old, but its methods have evolved dramatically. Early antiquarians focused on grand monuments and elite burials; modern practitioners examine everything from ancient crop pollen to the microbiomes of mummified remains, building far more nuanced pictures of ordinary life in the past. Community archaeology programmes, which involve local populations in fieldwork, are growing in number, recognising that descendant communities often hold knowledge and cultural memory that no excavation report can replicate.

    The Ðǿմ«Ã½ Archaeology feed is your one-stop source for the most relevant headlines as they break, tracking the latest excavations, discoveries, and debates from dig sites across the globe. Whether you follow developments in Egypt, Greece, the Americas, or closer to home, the feed brings together reporting on new finds, fieldwork updates, heritage policy, and the evolving science of understanding the human past.


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