News — Ancient Explorers

Count St. Germain – The Man and the Mystery

Ancient Explorers Blog Uncategorized

He was a mysterious person who refused to discuss his origin, fortune, and civil status and we know him first of all as Count de St. Germain. He claimed to have lived for several centuries. “…equalled the greatest of the personages who move across the canvas of history. He towered above them all, kings, […]

Read more →


2,300-Year-Old Pure Gold Crown Forgotten Under Pensioner’s Bed

Ancient Explorers Blog Discoveries Discovery Gold Crown Greek

An elderly man was stunned when he discovered that a box of trinkets he inherited from his grandfather contained an ancient Greek crown made of pure gold that an auctioneer says is worth at least $230,000. It has been reported that the pensioner had seen the crown nearly a decade ago but did not realize […]

Read more →


Black Death maps reveal how the plague devastated medieval Britain

Ancient Explorers Blog Uncategorized

Areas of the UK heavily affected by the Black DeathAntiquity/University of Lincoln An in-depth analysis of pottery shards has revealed the “eye-watering” impact the Black Death had across rural medieval England. Towns, villages and hamlets were ravaged by the peak of the plague between 1346 and 1351, and between 75 and 200 million people are […]

Read more →


DNA test results confirmed: Paracas skulls are not human – Further testing planned

Ancient Aliens Ancient Explorers Blog Discoveries

Who were these mysterious beings? Did they evolve separately on Earth?What caused them to have such drastic differences from ordinary humans? Photo Credits: Marcia K. Moore The desert peninsula of Paracas is located on the southern coast of one of South America’s most enigmatic countries: Peru. It is there, in this barren landscape where […]

Read more →


Vitrified wall at Ste-Suzanne (Mayenne) in Scotland: The hill fort – Top O Noth, Aberdeenshire mystery

Ancient Explorers Blog Discoveries Fossils

The hill fort ‘Tap O Noth’ lies on a hill top in Aberdeenshire, Scotland. Along the fort is a vitrified wall, a wall heated to such an intensity, for a period of time, that it becomes like glass. Among artifacts found at the fort are a stone axe, dated to somewhere between 2,000 BC and […]

Read more →