A 3,300-year-old Egyptian Book of the Dead papyrus reveals that ancient artists used a white mixture as the correction fluid.
Learn about the surprising discovery that shows that even ancient Egyptians used Wite-Out to fix their mistakes.
A Heartwarming Picture Book Adventure Along the River Nile Poppy’s Egyptian Adventure captures the joy of discovery ...
Cocaine didn't make its way across the Atlantic until after the Spanish invaded. So how did cocaine end up being found on ...
There’s a new mystery to solve on Peacock after the NBCUniversal streamer added a modern cinematic reimagining of a mystery ...
The music journalist speaks with Paste about spirituality, jazz, and his new book, Cosmic Music: The Life, Art, and Transcendence of Alice Coltrane.
World Cup tickets are expensive, and buying them has been frustrating and confusing.
Ahead of the March 22 premiere of a new TV adaptation, learn about the life of Thomas-Alexandre Dumas, the French Army officer who inspired the beloved novel ...
Books on homelessness, the U.S. Census and ancient India are among this year’s winners of prizes handed out by the J.
Debunking alien claims matters, but so does telling richer, more compelling stories about how humans shaped their own past.
Apparently, this approach for remembering grocery lists, house chores, deliveries, and the like was also a huge part of life for ancient Egyptians living over 2,000 years ago—something for which ...
Could ancient humans really have built the pyramids without extraterrestrial help? Or do such questions reveal more about modern anxieties than the past itself?