News Desk

Striped rock dismissed as natural in 1928 reclassified as UK’s oldest cave art
1st June 2026 | theguardian.com | Ancient, Humans

Scientific dating proves streaks on walls of Bacon Hole, near the Mumbles in south Wales, is Palaeolithic rock art… Archaeologists have used the latest scientific means to date the rock art, discovering that it was in fact created 17,100 years ago – making it the oldest example in Britain as well as north-western Europe. International academics have just published a scientific paper on their research in the journal Quaternary.

In Senegal, a 2,000‑year‑old iron workshop sheds new light on the past
1st June 2026 phys.org | Ancient, Humans

How was iron produced 2,000 years ago in Senegal? A recent study at the Didé West 1 archaeological site, in the Falémé Valley in eastern Senegal, sheds light on an ancient iron production technique.

Bronze Age 5-year-old’s skull found in Uzbekistan is the oldest known evidence of surgery in Central Asia
1st June 2026 | livescience.com | Ancient, Humans

The 4,000-year-old skull of a Bronze Age child buried in what’s now Uzbekistan bears scars from a cranial surgery known as trepanation. It is the oldest documented evidence of surgery in Central Asia and one of the oldest examples of surgery in all of Asia, the researchers report.

Human Brain Cells Grown on a Chip Level Up to Play ‘Doom’
1st June 2026 | sciencealert.com | Ancient, Humans

Australian researchers have trained lab-grown brain cells on a silicon computer chip to play the nineties shooter game “Doom” and say they are just scratching the surface of what the neurons could be capable of doing.

Your Blood May Contain an Evolutionary Relic Older Than Animals Themselves
28th May 2026 | sciencealert.com | Ancient, Earth

Nearly every animal on this magnificent planet has blood… but where the heck did it come from? Now, in an ambitious effort, an international team led by Kyoto University in Japan has traced the evolutionary history of blood cells back 700 million years – and discovered that they weren’t created from scratch after the rise of multicellular life. The findings have been published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

Bizarre patterns on Venus have scientists puzzled
27th May 2026 | livescience.com | Ancient, Space, Weird

Bizarre Venus surface formations (or coronae) are likely key to understanding our twin planet’s heretofore inscrutable interior. Using NASAMagellan spacecraft data from decades past, Anna Gulcher, an earth and planetary scientist at Germany’s University of Freiburg, have created innovative new 3D models of the largest coronae to better understand Venus’ puzzling geodynamics

A Radical Innovation Helped Archaic Humans Survive a Harsh Ice Age
25th May 2026 | sciencealert.com | Ancient, Humans

A brainy human relative who lived during an ice age nearly 150,000 years ago adapted to the bitter cold by developing a sophisticated stone-tool industry, according to a new study of a crystal-studded rib bone found in China. This research was published in the Journal of Human Evolution.

Evidence of Ancient Life Found Buried Under an Asteroid Crater
25th May 2026 | sciencealert.com | Ancient, Earth, Space

A new discovery in South Korea suggests that the asteroid effect may have been even more complex than we realized. The research has been published in Communications Earth & Environment.

Flint reveals changes in human mobility in the southern Pyrenees during the Upper Paleolithic
22nd May 2026 phys.org | Ancient, Humans

Analysis of more than 3,000 lithic artifacts from the Cova Gran de Santa Linya site (Les Avellanes-Santa Linya, Lleida) shows that anatomically modern human communities occupying the southern Pyrenees during the Upper Paleolithic used flint (chert) exclusively for tool production. The findings, published in the journal Quaternary International, indicate that raw-material selection was closely linked to technological changes, mobility organization and the ways in which these groups interacted with the landscape.

The Great Pyramid Has Survived 4,600 Years. A Strange Feature May Help Explain Why.
22nd May 2026 | sciencealert.com | Ancient, Humans

A new revelation about the pyramid’s design could add another feather to Egyptian engineering caps. According to new research, several properties of the structure could make it surprisingly earthquake resistant – whether the builders intended it or not. The fortifying features include the empty “relieving chambers” directly above the burial chamber of Pharaoh Khufu. The findings have been published in Scientific Reports.

How a 4,000-year-old city defied history’s ‘rules’ by becoming more equal as it became more successful
21st May 2026 phys.org | Ancient, Humans

A new study at the University of York delves into the archaeology of the 4,000-year-old Mohenjo-daro, the Indus civilization’s largest city… By analyzing house sizes across the ancient city, researchers found that Mohenjo-daro was not only more equal than its neighbors in Mesopotamia and Greece, but it actually became more egalitarian over time. The findings were published in the journal Antiquity. 

Magic mushrooms could be effective treatment for cocaine addiction, study shows
19th May 2026 | theguardian.com | Humans, Misc.
Brain scans reveal how ibogaine alters neural networks in veterans with head trauma
19th May 2026 | psypost.org | Humans, Misc.

Special Operations veterans suffering from traumatic brain injuries and posttraumatic stress disorder experienced notable improvements in their symptoms after a single dose of the psychoactive drug ibogaine. Brain scans revealed that the therapy was associated with persistent increases in cerebral blood flow and the widespread reorganization of neural networks. The research was published in the journal Biological Psychiatry: Cognitive Neuroscience and Neuroimaging.

Neanderthals gathered shellfish using the same strategies as modern humans, study finds
19th May 2026 phys.org | Ancient, Humans

The research, published in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, shows that 115,000 years ago Neanderthal groups from Los Aviones Cave (Cartagena, Region of Murcia, Spain) were already consuming mollusks following a clearly seasonal pattern, particularly during the colder months of the year, from November to April.

‘We kept finding large, circular mass graves’ in the Sahara predating the ancient Egyptians, archaeologists report
19th May 2026 | livescience.com | Ancient, Earth, Humans

Our new research, published in the journal African Archaeological Review, reveals how we found 260 previously unknown enclosure burials east of the Nile River, across almost 1,000km of desert…The carbon dates and pottery from the few excavated monuments tell us these people lived roughly 4000–3000 BCE, just before Egyptians formed a territorial kingdom we know of as Pharaonic Egypt.

The human brain processes the passage of time across three distinct stages
14th May 2026 | psypost.org | Humans, Misc.

A recent study mapping the human brain reveals that our perception of time does not happen all at once, but rather unfolds across a series of distinct physical processing stages. As visual information travels from the back of the brain to the front, different groups of neurons handle specific parts of the timing process, ultimately creating our subjective experience of how long an event lasts. These findings were published in the journal PLOS Biology.

Daily alternative news articles at the GrahamHancock News Desk. Featuring science, alternative history, archaeology, Ancient Egypt, paranormal and much more. Check in daily for updates!