As all these discoveries show, the land’s buried secrets have the power to transform our understanding of history, faith, and ...
The Times of Israel on MSN
How did biblical Judeans track time? Trove of 6th-century BCE inscriptions offers clues
New analysis of 2,600-year-old Tel Arad ostraca suggests Iron Age soldiers tracked months, days, and supplies with ...
Recent archaeological discoveries at two pivotal biblical sites are transforming our understanding of early Christianity's expansion across the ancient Mediterranean world. In Turkey's ancient Lystra, ...
A Fall Family Carnival will be held at 10 a.m.-1 p.m. Saturday, Oct 18, at Faith Church Loveland, 2707 N. Wilson Ave. Join ...
The Times of Israel on MSN
In first, three shipwrecks from biblical times uncovered off the coast of Israel
Only 11 ships from the Iron Age previously found in the Mediterranean; discovery provides evidence of maritime trade under ...
Eilat Mazar is unafraid to claim archaeological finds of biblical proportions. When the ribbon was cut to dedicate Jerusalem's newest archaeological attraction last summer, Eilat Mazar stood among the ...
The researchers uncovered three distinct submerged cargo assemblages in the Dor Lagoon—also known as Tantura Lagoon—on Israel ...
Daily Express US on MSN
Major Bible breakthrough as scientists share hidden clues in sacred text
Using AI, experts have uncovered hidden language patterns within some of the Bible's oldest books. A group of international ...
Author's Note: All previous volumes of this series are here. The first 56 volumes are compiled into the book "Bible Study For Those Who Don't Read The Bible." "Part Two," featuring volumes 57-113, was ...
Grave goods buried with the dead, such as jewelry and weapons, could be relics of paganism that remained as Christianity rose ...
The public is invited to focus on archaeology with “Astonishing Discoveries and Prophecies in the Land of the Bible,” presented Sept. 12 and 13 at the Campion Seventh-day Adventist Church, 300 42nd St ...
Mediafeed on MSN
5 archaeological finds made by amateurs
In 2009, Terry Herbert, an unemployed metal detectorist in Staffordshire, England, swept his detector over a freshly plowed ...
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