Six beautiful tapestries depicting the hunt of a unicorn are on permanent display at the Musee de Cluny in Paris. They’ve been called the “Mona Lisa of woven artworks,” but no one knows who created them. Despite their being made in the 15th or 16th century, no mention of the tapestries exists before 1814. No […]
Lake Anjikuni is the locale for the disappearance of an entire village. It all happened in November 1930, when a trapper named Joe Labelle was looking for shelter for the night. Labelle was familiar with the Inuit village, whose population ranges from 30-2000, depending on who you believe. He made his way there and found […]
Nine newfound penny-sized pieces of parchment belonging to the Dead Sea Scrolls laid unopened for nearly six decades before they were rediscovered in Israel. The scrolls went unnoticed for years until one scholar came across them while searching through the Israel Antiquities Authority’s (IAA) storerooms, the Times of Israel reported. “Either they didn’t realize that […]
This article first appeared in ancient-code.com and is written by Ivan Petricevic History is being rewritten again thanks to excavations in China where researchers were able to find evidence of the use of fire for several purposes, and that, over 600,000 years ago. Chinese scientists claim that one of the oldest ancestor to man, the Peking man […]
This article first appeared in ancient-code.com and is written by Jock Doubleday For posting my article about the Piri Reis map on Forbidden Archaeology’s Facebook page, I was blocked from posting on, or even seeing, the page. The article lampoons Robert Schoch’s anti-scientific nonsense about this incredible map. I suppose some things are forbidden even to those […]