Archaeologists in Turkey say they have uncovered evidence that the Romans used human feces in medical treatments, according to new research.
The vial, also known as an unguentarium, is commonly believed to have held perfumes or cosmetic oils.
A smooth, white stone dating from the Roman era and unearthed in the Netherlands has long baffled researchers.
Researchers used AI-driven virtual players to test more than 100 rule sets, matching gameplay to wear patterns on a Roman limestone board.
A Norwegian archaeologist believes that the Norwegians were on their way to the Roman Empire as mercenaries around the year ...
In the storage rooms of a museum in western Turkey, an archaeologist noticed an unexpected residue inside a small Roman glass ...
A Roman stone board game has been unplayable since its discovery more than a century ago, but AI might have just worked out ...
Those findings paved the way for a series of large, on-the-ground surveys conducted between 2024 and 2025. A team of ...