The monument was first documented in 1583 by the English cartographer John Norden, who wrote, "It is called Arthur's Hall".
Back in the 1970s, when archaeologists excavated a skeleton from an ancient graveyard in Belgium, they thought they had found ...
New research by Flinders University researchers, conducted in partnership with the River Murray and Mallee Aboriginal ...
A paper on 14 victims from Pompeii describes how DNA analysis shows a different story behind the relationships of the ...
Tree rings reveal ancient solar storms, helping scientists predict and prepare for future events that could disrupt ...
Researchers solved the mystery of a five-person-skeleton found in Belgium. The skeleton consists of bones of 5 people ...
An ancient burial in Belgium contains bones from five people, spanning 2,500 years. Radiocarbon dating reveals a unique history.
BBC News reports that excavations at the site of King Arthur’s Hall on Bodmin Moor, which scholars once thought had been ...
The burial is called a “composite inhumation,” a practice in which a group will build a skeleton for social purposes from the ...
A skeleton buried in a fetal position is actually made of bones from at least five people who lived across a span of 2,500 ...
Archaeologists have unravelled the mystery of a strange skeleton from Belgium consisting of bones from five people who lived ...
Genetic analysis has confirmed a detail of an important Norse saga, telling us more about someone dubbed the "Well-man".