Here's a philosophical question for you. If a color doesn't have a name, can we still see it? Many years ago, the human eye evolved to give us the ability to see about a million colors. That's a lot.
On this day 35 years ago, NASA's Voyager 1 spacecraft took a picture that changed how we see our planet. The iconic "Pale ...
"The only constant is change," as the old saying goes, but that seems to be particularly true in the past couple decades.
→Bright blue chunk found in Rome turns out to be rare 2,000-year-old material. See it →Metal detectorist unearths ancient gold item — and stuns ... The areas had large pieces of Middle and Late Iron ...
It has been wonderful to see the pupils engage in this. For some this has sparked a genuine interest in archaeology.” ...
Archaeologists found the ancient graveyard during construction work and, so far, have excavated less than half of it.
He’s Alex Matisse, a potter-turned-businessman whose East Fork Pottery is a proud hybrid of art and American manufacturing. And, oh yeah, he’s also the great-grandson of the French painter and ...
This unique degree programme offers training in an unparalleled range of ancient languages and their associated history, culture and textual traditions. Students study Hebrew and either Greek or Latin ...
More than 5,000 years ago, in ancient Egypt, a mixture of silica, lime, copper, and an alkali was heated, resulting in a bright blue compound known as calcium copper silicate. This striking, vibrant ...
But the citrus genus has a surprising history, popping up everywhere from ancient Rome and the Renaissance ... donuts positioned on a pink and blue background. Like many of the world's resources ...