A 600,000-year-old bone from Notarchirico, Italy, provides the earliest evidence of cave lions in southern Europe
Archaeologists have been investigating human bones of 20 Celts, found near the ruins of the bridge at Cornaux/Les Sauges
All the people who lived and were buried in Barmaz necropolises during the Neolithic period had the same access to food resources
Did Vesuvius bury the home of the first Roman Emperor? Excavations reveal new parts of a villa near Nola, thought to belong to Octavian Augustus
The first dating study of Pirro Nord, Italy, traditionally regarded as the oldest archaeological site in western Europe, indicates that it is probably much younger than anticipated
The first Neolithic boats in the Mediterranean Sea at La Marmotta: canoes from Italy reveal early development of advanced nautical technology
How About You? (E tu come stai?) is a documentary film by Filippo Maria Gori and Lorenzo Enrico Gori about the GKN workers
Of the 161 people buried at Seminario Vescovile, an archaeological site in Verona from 3rd to 1st century BCE, 16 were buried with some kind of animal remains
Genetic analysis and archaeological insight combine to reveal the ancient origins of the fallow deer, the results have been published in two new studies
Homo sapiens already reached northwest Europe more than 45,000 years ago and lived alongside Neanderthals, according to three new studies