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500-Year-Old Map Explodes ‘Earth-Shattering Reality’

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World famous Ottoman cartographer Piri Reis’ 500-year-old map, apart from accurately exploring the northern coast of Antarctica, provides mind-boggling information about 2000 important ports and cities of the Mediterranean Sea, the western coasts of Europe and North Africa and the eastern coast of South America. The Piri Reis map was compiled in 1513 and when […]

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Could a Human Not in Our Species Still Exist?

Ancient Explorers Blog Discoveries Fossils Homo Sapiens Fossils Evolution Humans Science Uncategorized

New fossil discoveries continue to push the known boundaries of human evolution An ancient species of human from China, thought to be long extinct, likely survived until at least the last Ice Age 14,000 years ago, new research finds. Since the timeframe of these so-called Red Deer Cave people, as well as Homo floresiensis (aka […]

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Gujarat: Likely Buddhist monastery remains unearthed in Vadnagar (India)

Ancient Explorers Blog Discoveries

The finding could establish the importance of the region as a thriving Buddhist centre [representational picture].   (AFP Photo) The Archeological Survey of India (ASI) has unearthed structures resembling a Buddhist monastery in Vadnagar, Gujarat. This finding could further establish the importance of the region as a thriving Buddhist centre. “The latest excavation revealed structures resembling […]

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Researchers discover bullet holes in Million year old prehistoric skulls

Ancient Explorers Blog Discoveries Science

Although many are reluctant to accept it, there are a number of anomalies that show us clearly that something disturbing happened in the past, that we have actually no idea what happened on Earth thousands of ears ago, yet the answers seem to be right in front of us. Some consider these findings as being […]

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Naval Bases Found That Once Guarded World’s First Democracy

Ancient Explorers Blog Discoveries Science

The trireme “Olympias,” a modern replica. (Wikimedia Commons) Archaeologists have discovered massive naval bases that once enabled Athens to fight off the Persian Empire—and develop the world’s first democracy. Among the recent finds at the Port of Piraeus, Greece’s biggest seaport, are ship-sheds that held hundreds of warships known as triremes, the Smithsonian reports...

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