
Archaeology Magazine
Through The Years Explore decades of exciting archaeological discoveries, new technologies in the field, and stunning images in the Archaeology magazine archive.
Today’s News - Archaeology Magazine
Read Article Photo: Nicole Gebhard/© Archaeology Baselland News December 24, 2025 Intestinal Parasites Infected Roman Soldiers at Vindolanda Read Article University of Cambridge
January/February 2025 - Archaeology Magazine
Illegally enslaved and then marooned on remote Tromelin Island for fifteen years, with only ARCHAEOLOGY to tell their story
March/April 2025 - Archaeology Magazine
Jiangxi Provincial Institute of Cultural Relics and Archaeology/Handout via Xinhua Sen You et al., Archaeological and Anthropological Sciences (2025)
Archive - Archaeology Magazine
Back issues of ARCHAEOLOGY magazine preserve timeless articles that remain as exciting and interesting today as when they were first printed. Quantities are limited, and orders will be filled …
July/August 2025 - Archaeology Magazine
Italian archaeologists have uncovered evidence of smuggling between North Africa and Italy on a third-century a.d. shipwreck off the west coast of Sicily. The most complete Roman ship ever …
Mystery of Strange Canadian Rock Carvings Solved - Archaeology …
Jun 18, 2025 · WAWA, CANADA—For the past seven years, archaeologist Ryan Primrose, director of the Ontario Centre for Archaeological Education, has studied mysterious symbols …
About Us - Archaeology Magazine
ARCHAEOLOGY has been published continuously for more than 75 years by the Archaeological Institute of America, which is dedicated to supporting archaeological inquiry and to fostering …
Italy’s Garden of Monsters - Archaeology Magazine
Copy permalink to clipboard https://archaeology.org/issues/july-august-2025/features/italys-garden-of-monsters/ Copied to clipboard
November/December 2024 - Archaeology Magazine
The Namib Sand Sea, home to 350-foot-tall sand dunes, receives so little rainfall that it is almost uninhabitable. Scholars believed it had been this way for millions of years—but this turns out ...