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Resources and contents to fuel your passion The page at a glance ArkeoTopia and archaeological research ArkeoTopia...
Resources and content for your research Working with ArkeoTopia We work regularly with members and organizations...
Several archaeological sites in the Swabian Jura, Germany, have led to the discovery of Paleolithic flutes in recent decades. In 2012, precise dating showed that these flutes are probably the oldest known human musical instruments.
Discover the Fayoum region with Anne Radigue. For this out of the way destination, Anne tells us about the cultural and natural wonders that she discovered in this region during her tourist trip in October 2019.
April 2012 in Timbuktu: Al-Quaïda soldiers,in the Maghreb, threaten to destroy the rare manuscripts of the city. A librarian organises a network in order to put them in a safe place.
How the discovery of a 3,400-year-old Sumerian hymn challenged the theories about the origins of occidental music.
A team of German researchers from the Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History and the Institute for Archaeological Sciences of Tubingen University could have identified the nature of the disease that decimated the Aztecs in the 16th century.
We used to think that the Vikings from Greenland who landed in North America only had unfriendly encounters with American Indians. Excavations on Baffin Island reveals that there may have been a commercial trade between the Scandinavians and the Dorsets.
How does a new, hi-tech, detection system reveal the existence of Mayan buildings and a network of connections between previously unknown cities? The Franco-Guatemalan Naachtun project helps explain.