King Tut's outer coffin removed from his tomb for the first time ever, face of humankind's Denisovan ancestors reconstructed, Bronze Age sword unearthed.
After 3,300 Years, King Tut’s Coffin Leaves His Tomb For The First Time Ever
The outermost coffin holding the body of King Tutankhamun had never left the 3,300-year-old tomb from the time his body was first laid to rest there. Even after British archaeologist Howard Carter discovered the tomb in 1922, the outer coffin made from wood and gold stayed in the Valley of Kings — until now.
Earlier this year, the Getty Conservation Institute and the Egyptian Ministry of Antiquities finished a nearly 10-year-long restoration of Tut’s tomb. Now, they’ll restore his golden coffin, removing it from its resting place and allowing experts to finally get a good look.
See more here.
Scientists Reveal What Our Denisovan Ancestors Looked Like 75,000 Years Ago
It’s incredible what just a little bit of DNA can do. Scientists have successfully reconstructed, for the first time, what one of our archaic human ancestors may have looked like — using only fragments taken from a pinky bone.
A new study by international researchers has created the first facial reconstruction of a teenage girl who lived in modern-day Siberia some 75,000 years ago and belonged to the Denisovan group of early humans.
Dig deeper in this report.
3,200-Year-Old Bronze Age Sword Unearthed On Spanish Island Of Mallorca
A 3,200-year-old sword was recently unearthed on the Spanish island of Mallorca in the town of Puigpunyent. The “Talaiot del Serral de ses Abelles” site is home to large stone megaliths called talayot (or talaiot), which date from 1000 to 6000 B.C.
Mallorcan historian and archaeologist Guillem Rossello Bordoy first excavated the talayot in 1950. Nearly seven decades later, archaeologists Jaume Deya and Pablo Galera stumbled upon the relic dating from 1200 B.C. in remarkable condition.
Read on here.