The Musée du Fromage in Paris hosts tastings and teaches visitors about traditional cheesemaking practices
The structure appears to predate Machu Picchu, the country's best-known archaeological site, by 3,500 years
Bill Stampfl, Matthew Richardson and Steve Erskine went missing in an avalanche on Huascarán on June 24, 2002. Climbers found Stampfl's body just weeks ago
The vessel will be preserved beneath Antarctic waters inside a sprawling restricted zone
Known as the "French Excalibur," the blade is said to have hung from a rock face in the village of Rocamadour for 1,300 years
Pompey Mansfield was an enslaved man who won his freedom, purchased land, constructed a house and became a prominent community leader
The 2,000-year-old statue, which likely depicts Hermes, is a monumental discovery for Bulgaria
Both Western analyses and traditional Aboriginal knowledge helped the research team learn about a cultural practice dating to the last ice age
The French government has declared the artifacts national treasures, which means they can only leave the country temporarily
A new study challenges a core assumption about the Antikythera mechanism, a 2,000-year-old device that inspired the latest "Indiana Jones" film
A new exhibition traces the evolution of one of the world's most famous dolls over six decades
The sketches, which are heading to auction this week, showcase the teenage royal's devotion to the arts
Northern Europe and the British Isles
Archaeologists have enlisted volunteers to dig up the remains of a Bronze Age roundhouse found beneath a park
Locals had long shared stories of Collyweston Palace. Then, excavations in England's Midlands revealed traces of the fabled estate
Thieves stole the timepiece, a gift from the president's sister, from an unlocked display case in 1987
A new analysis of nuts, timber and other items found onboard the Kyrenia shipwreck is shedding new light on the vessel's timeline
The finds include mummies from many social classes, some of whom were buried alongside relatives after succumbing to disease
The National Portrait Gallery purchased an 1846 daguerreotype of Dolley Madison for $456,000
Archaeologists have uncovered around 70 iron rivets that may have once held together a boat belonging to a king
The administrators spent long periods writing in odd postures, which damaged their joints, researchers discovered
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