ScienceAlert on MSN
We finally know why Roman concrete has survived for nearly 2,000 years
A construction site dating back nearly 2,000 years to the putative demise of Pompeii in 79 CE has revealed new evidence for ...
ZME Science on MSN
In a Remote Egyptian Port, Roman Officers May Have Proven Their Status by Owning Exotic Monkeys From India
Berenike was an isolated, windswept outpost. It linked the Roman Empire to the trade routes of India, Arabia, and East Africa ...
Though rare, female gladiators did appear in the Roman arena, challenging ancient Rome’s expectations and revealing how ...
There were many ways in which the elites of ancient Roman society flaunted their wealth. They built vast villas, sponsored ...
While excavating at the ancient fort of La Loma in the northern Iberian Peninsula, archaeologists found the shattered ...
New archaeological evidence is helping rewrite old myths about disabled people in the ancient world.
New DNA analysis reveals how the rise and fall of the Roman Empire ultimately shifted the population in the Balkans.
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