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Alongside the wheel, a 3,500-year-old ceremonial urn from the Bronze Age and several flint tools have also been uncovered.
Artifacts spanning thousands of years have been uncovered during work on a new golf course in the Scottish Highlands.
Archaeologists were surprised to discover a rare chariot wheel dating back to the Iron Age during an excavation at the future site of a golf course near Inverness, Scotland.
MailOnline's graphic reveals the top words in dictionaries from around the British Isles, including Cornish, Welsh and Old English.
FLINT, MI - A town hall meeting was held on the 11th anniversary of the Flint Water Crisis Friday, April 25 to give residents a platform to voice their frustration and call for continued ...
Now there’s a chariot wheel. As crews continue to prep the new Old Petty course for a 2026 grand opening, details of ...
Other discoveries are the Mengxihe Paleolithic site in Southwest China's Sichuan Province, the Xiatang Neolithic site in East China's Zhejiang Province, the Liulihe relic site in Beijing ...
Excavation over 500,000 m² uncovered 25+ prehistoric buildings, a ritual circle, and medieval grain kilns. Artefacts will be dated and sent to museums later this year.
The excavations, conducted by Avon Archaeology Highland, also uncovered a 3,500-year-old Bronze Age cremation urn, flint tools, quern stones and remnants of Neolithic wooden buildings ...
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