Göbekli Tepe has long been described as a mysterious site whose great enclosures were intentionally buried. But new evidence ...
The 11,500-year-old archaeological site was unharmed in the disaster, which has killed over 35,000 people and destroyed thousands of buildings. Reading time 2 minutes The magnitude 7.8 earthquake that ...
Stephen has degrees in science (Physics major) and arts (English Literature and the History and Philosophy of Science), as well as a Graduate Diploma in Science Communication. Stephen has degrees in ...
The great T-shaped pillars of Göbekli Tepe are usually treated as mysterious symbolic monuments. Yet their arrangement, ...
Were someone to ask you what is the oldest monument known to mankind, most people would say the Pyramids of Egypt or perhaps, Stonehenge. However, Gobekli Tepe predates Stonehenge by 7,000 years and ...
2019 43COM 8B.54 - Statements of Outstanding Universal Value of properties inscribed at previous sessions and not adopted by the World Heritage Committee 2024 Summary of the State of conservation ...
Markings on a stone pillar at a 12,000 year-old archaeological site in Turkey likely represent the world’s oldest solar calendar, created as a memorial to a devastating comet strike, experts suggest.
The sprawling 11,500-year-old stone Göbekli Tepe complex in southeastern Anatolia, Turkey, is the earliest known temple in human history and one of the most important discoveries of Neolithic research ...
Around 10,000 years ago, the already striking presence of Göbekli Tepe in southeastern Turkey could have been even more impressive—as human skulls might have dangled in what is considered the world's ...
When pilot and adventurer Barry Billcliff arrived in southeastern Turkey last November, he expected to uncover history. However, he didn't expect to question how it was being told. Billcliff, whose ...