News

A 1,800-year-old skeleton discovered in Roman Britain bears bite marks suggesting a violent death at the hands of a large ...
A thrilling discovery in York has unveiled the first-ever physical evidence of a human fighting a lion in Roman times, thanks to bite marks found on a skeleton in a gladiator cemetery. This adds a ...
This week, a string of archaeological studies lend insight into Roman gladiators, an ancient crocodile-like beast, and a ...
Bite marks found on a skeleton discovered in a Roman cemetery in York have revealed the first archaeological evidence of gladiatorial combat between a human and a lion.
Optimism was abound for Jazz Chisholm Jr., Anthony Volpe, Austin Wells, Cody Bellinger and Paul Goldschmidt, the five guys ...
Those comparisons, laid out in a paper published in Quaternary Science Reviews, point to a surprising conclusion: the Baume ...
The object was zipping across the open San Luis Valley. It was cigar-shaped and bronze. And, according to Judy Messoline, ...
Researchers compared puncture marks on an 1,800-year-old skeleton in the UK to various animal bites, and concluded that the ...
It's the first-ever evidence of man-lion combat found in the Roman period.
Researchers say the man’s spinal damage, lung inflammation, and lion bite offer a rare glimpse into the brutal reality of ...
The skeleton was excavated from Driffield Terrace, one of the most significant Roman-era burial sites in Britain.
A discovery in an English garden led to the first direct evidence that man fought beast to entertain the subjects of the ...