The discovery of a stone long overlooked in a German museum suggests that Ice Age communities experimented with vivid hues ...
Researchers in Spain used Apple iPhone’s built-in LiDAR sensor to create a 3D map of a cave with hundreds of prehistoric cave ...
The drawings—the oldest dated monumental rock art in Arabia—are the firmest evidence that humans lived there during a dry ...
Now, following a tip from local amateur archaeologists about a giant piece of rock art, researchers have explored three previously unknown sites in the southern Nafud Desert in northern Saudi Arabia ...
A stone artifact from near the end of the Paleolithic period was originally identified as a lamp, but new evidence suggests that it contains traces of a blue mineral called azurite. Photograph by Izzy ...
If this rare discovery is truly evidence of Ice Age artists employing blue, then why don’t we see more blue in Paleolithic art? If azurite was locally available — its isotopic “fingerprint” matches ...
Forget Florence-too crowded. Paris? They coined a whole term, the Mona Lisa Effect, to describe the letdown of seeing its art in person. Berlin is gray and dreary, and its scene has now been declared ...
Scan the cave paintings and portable art of our Paleolithic ancestors and the colors black, yellow, and red abound. Shades of blue and green, however, are virtually nonexistent. For the past half ...
London gallery ArtAncient will display artworks from ancient Egypt and Cyprus with newly rediscovered histories.
More than 200 objects illuminate the religion of those who built the pyramids four millennia ago.
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