(Fulya OZERKAN/AFP/AFP) On the windswept hills overlooking Turkey's vast southeastern plains, new archaeological discoveries are revealing how life might have looked 11,000 years ago when the world's ...
ISTANBUL (Reuters) -A set of carved stone animals - a fox, a vulture and a wild boar - is shedding light on the way prehistoric people told stories after being unearthed by archaeologists in ...
At one of the world’s oldest Stone Age archaeological sites— Karahantepe in southeast Turkey—researchers have unearthed a T-shaped stone pillar bearing a carved human face. Dating back some 11,000 ...
In the process of excavating a Roman forum near the ancient city of Amastris (now known as Amasra) in present-day Turkey, ...
The Brighterside of News on MSN
Faces of the Stone Age: Ancient stone obelisk rewrites what we know about art and self-awareness
Archaeologists in Turkey have found a 12,000-year-old stone pillar with a carved human face—the oldest known example of self-expression and artistry.
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results