Analysis of a skull from Ephesos, previously speculated to belong to Arsinoë IV, Cleopatra's sister, reveals it is actually that of a boy aged 11-14 with developmental disorders.
The Ephesus skull. Six norm views: (a) frontal, (b) lateral sinistra, (c) vertical, (d) occipital, (e) lateral dextra, (f) basal. Credit: Gerhard W. Weber / CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 Researchers have revealed ...
The skull of a person long thought to be Cleopatra’s half sister was misidentified for nearly a century, new research from Nature Scientific Reports concludes, raising intriguing questions about ...
The well-preserved skull belongs to a never-before-seen species of sauropodomorph that potentially grew up to 33 feet long. An enormous, extremely well preserved dinosaur skull unearthed in China ...
A nearly century-old mystery surrounding a skull thought to belong to Cleopatra’s murdered sister was solved thanks to modern DNA analysis. Archaeologists exploring a Turkish tomb in 1929 made ...
A skull once thought to be Cleopatra’s sister Arsinoë IV was identified as that of a Roman boy with developmental disorders, ending decades of speculation. The search for Arsinoë IV’s remains now ...
A new study settled a century-long debate over whether an ancient skull found at an elaborate tomb in Ephesos, Turkey, was Cleopatra’s sister. Photo from Gerhard Weber, University of Vienna ...
For nearly a century, scientists have believed that a skull discovered in the ancient Turkish city of Ephesus belonged to Cleopatra’s half-sister Arsinoë IV. Unearthed in 1929 at a magnificent ...
The skull was discovered in 1929 by archaeologists excavating a tomb in Turkey. (file) A mystery dating back nearly a century about a skull believed to belong to Cleopatra's murdered half-sister ...
Stock image of a human skull at an archaeological site. A heap of skulls found in the center of a (not pictured) has revealed evidence of a ritual tradition that appears to have been practiced ...