The 3,000 year-old Peebles Hoard is redefining the understanding of Scotland's Bronze Age with never-before seen treasures.
Radiocarbon dating of the object has indicated that it is about 3,500-3,400 years old, placing it firmly in the Middle Bronze ...
Archaeologists excavating a site in Dorset, England, have recovered one of the oldest and most complete wooden tools ever ...
CT scanning also revealed that some of these objects were produced using 'lost-wax casting', a rare technique in Bronze Age Britain. This represents some of the earliest evidence of its use in ...
A routine excavation turned out to be a historical one for archaeologists in Britain when they came across a well-preserved ...
The wooden spade, almost 3,000 years old, was discovered during archaeological excavations by Wessex Archaeology.
The dig revealed the largest find of glass beads from Late Bronze Age Britain, with most of the glass originating from Iran "Must Farm also dispels the myth that in the past people were quite ...
This places the spade’s origins in the Middle Bronze Age. “It’s quite a big time of change in prehistoric Britain,” says Treasure. People were becoming less nomadic and spending much more ...