EditorialITALY - POPE FRANCIS RECEIVES IN PRIVATE AUDIENCE PARTICIPANTS IN THE PLENARY OF THE PONTIFICAL COMMISSION FOR SACRED ARCHAEOLOGY IN THE VATICAN - 2024/5/17
EditorialITALY - POPE FRANCIS RECEIVES IN PRIVATE AUDIENCE PARTICIPANTS IN THE PLENARY OF THE PONTIFICAL COMMISSION FOR SACRED ARCHAEOLOGY IN THE VATICAN - 2024/5/17
EditorialKehinde Wiley at “An Archaeology of Silence” at the de Young Museum with his monumental 2022 painting, “Femme piquée par un serpent (Mamadou Gueye)," in San Francisco, Calif., on March 14, 2023. (Ian C. Bates/The New York Times)
EditorialKehinde Wiley at “An Archaeology of Silence” at the de Young Museum with his monumental 2022 painting, “Femme piquée par un serpent (Mamadou Gueye)," in San Francisco, Calif., on March 14, 2023. (Ian C. Bates/The New York Times)
EditorialKehinde Wiley at “An Archaeology of Silence” at the de Young Museum with his monumental 2022 painting, “Femme piquée par un serpent (Mamadou Gueye)," in San Francisco, Calif., on March 14, 2023. (Ian C. Bates/The New York Times)
EditorialKehinde Wiley at “An Archaeology of Silence” at the de Young Museum with his monumental 2022 painting, “Femme piquée par un serpent (Mamadou Gueye)," in San Francisco, Calif., on March 14, 2023. (Ian C. Bates/The New York Times)
EditorialAbbie Harrison, a project archaeologist, examines plant materials at Alpine Archaeological Consultants? lab in Montrose, Colo. on Jan. 4, 2023. (Kristin Braga Wright/The New York Times)
EditorialA nude of the writer Victor Hugo by Auguste Rodin, at the Besan?on Museum of Fine Arts and Archaeology in Besan?on, France on Dec. 7, 2022. (Andrea Mantovani/The New York Times)
EditorialSeamus Caulfield, a retired archaeology professor, cuts peat using a traditional angled spade called a sleán, on his family’s land in Belderrig, Ireland, June 22, 2022. (Paulo Nunes dos Santos/The New York Times)
EditorialRoger Michel, executive director of the Institute of Digital Archaeology in Banbury, England, in June 2022. (Francesca Jones/The New York Times)
EditorialIn a photo from the Far Western Anthropological Research Group, a tour of schoolchildren learning about Sii Tuupenatak’s archaeology in the San Francisco Bay Area in 2017. (Far Western Anthropological Research Group via The New York Times)
EditorialOtzi, the 5,300-year-old man discovered in the Alps in 1991, in the South Tyrol Museum of Archaeology in Bolzano, Italy, March 11, 2017. (Dmitry Kostyukov/The New York Times)
EditorialOtzi, the 5,300-year-old man discovered in the Alps in 1991, in the South Tyrol Museum of Archaeology in Bolzano, Italy, March 11, 2017. (Dmitry Kostyukov/The New York Times)
EditorialLukasz Szczepanski, the head of archaeology at a regional history museum who called the discovery of the medieval French coins “an exceedingly rare and surprising find,” in Ostroda, Poland, June 28, 2021. (Maciek Nabrdalik/The New York Times)