Archaeologists have unveiled new insights into the hunting strategies employed by prehistoric humans in North America, focusing on their interactions with large megafauna like mammoths. The findings, detailed in the journal PLOS ONE, suggest that these ancient hunters utilized specially…
August 6, 2019 · by
Daniel Valandovski · in
Ancient Greece,
Ancient Rome / Roman Empire,
Ancient Thrace,
Antiquity,
Bulgarian Empire,
Byzantine Empire,
Christianity,
Crime & Law,
Cultural Tourism,
Middle Ages,
Modern Era,
Museums & Institutes,
Other History,
Ottoman Empire,
Prehistory,
Underwater Archaeology
Three “species” of treasure hunters dubbed “diggers”, “yuppies” and “super experts”, whose a total number is in the low six figures, are destroying the world archaeology and history heritage found in Bulgaria in a criminal industry worth up to 1…
When a person from the “Old World” (Africa, Asia, Europe) goes to the United States, they invariably come across the term “Pre-Columbian” at some point, regardless of their profession or the reason for their visit.
The Norse, or Viking colonies in Greenland had a near monopoly on medieval Western Europe’s trade in ivory but precisely overreliance on it may have led to their mysterious vanishing, an analysis of walrus DNA suggests.
August 8, 2018 · by
Ivan Dikov · in
Ancient Rome / Roman Empire,
Antiquity,
Bulgarian Empire,
Byzantine Empire,
Christianity,
Cultural Tourism,
Middle Ages,
Modern Era,
Museums & Institutes,
Other History,
Ottoman Empire
Almost 258,000 tourists have visited the rich historical, archaeological, and cultural tourism sites from the Antiquity, Middle Ages and the Modern Age in the city of Veliko Tarnovo in Central North Bulgaria.