News

A team of researchers from the University of Malta and the Max Planck Institute, led by archaeologist Eleonor Scerri made a ...
New archaeological discoveries from Malta suggest that prehistoric hunter-gatherers were far more capable oflong-distance sea ...
Archaeologists find evidence that hunter-gatherers crossed over 100 kilometers of open sea to reach Malta 8,500 years ago.
Malta's history has been pushed back by 1,000 years in a discovery that is rewriting the islands' pre-history, as scientists have found new evidence that shows that ...
For a long time, the planet’s small remote islands were considered the last untouched refuges of nature—isolated ecosystems ...
Seafaring hunter-gatherers were accessing remote, small islands such as Malta thousands of years before the arrival of the ...
Ground-breaking discovery reveals Malta was inhabited 1,000 years earlier than previously thought—by Mesolithic hunter-gatherers who crossed 100km of open sea from Sicily • Discovery reshapes narrativ ...
The discovery of evidence suggesting that hunter-gatherers from mainland Europe reached Malta approximately 1,000 years earlier than previously believed has rewritten the timeline of early human ...
New archaeological finds in Malta add to an emerging theory that early Stone Age humans cruised the open seas.
Malta reached earlier than previously thought: Researchers have found evidence that hunter-gatherers arrived on the island by boat as early as 8,500 years ago – around 1,000 years before the first ...
This week was an exciting one for any people with a love for Malta’s history. It’s rare that we get to see history be changed before our very eyes, but a discovery in Mellieha by a ...