BC bronze and flint arrowheads from the Tollense Valley, north-east Germany, uncovering the earliest evidence for large-scale ...
A new analysis of arrowheads at a Bronze Age site in Germany shows that local warriors clashed with an army from the south ...
Bronze Age arrowheads from the Tollense Valley shed light on a massive battle over 3,000 years ago, involving over 2,000 ...
Metal arrowheads found in Germany’s Tollense Valley shed light on who may have fought in the ancient conflict around 1250 B.C ...
Investigations in northeastern Germany have uncovered evidence of a large and violent conflict that took place around 1250 B.C.
Northeastern Germany’s Tollense Valley hosts what is known as the world’s oldest battlefield: an archaeological site bearing the remains of some 150 individuals, dating to the 13th century BCE.
A new analysis of dozens of arrowheads is helping researchers piece together a clearer portrait of the warriors who clashed on Europe’s oldest known battlefield 3,250 years ago. The bronze and flint ...
Tollense Valley could provide the earliest evidence of interregional conflict in Europe, with fighters coming from far away ...
To try to answer these questions, a team of researchers from several German institutions compared the bronze and flint ...
“It’s daily business here that people don’t meet the entry requirements for Germany and perhaps even for the Schengen area and then have to be subjected to further police measures,” Tom ...
Arrowhead boosted the damage on loads of underwhelming guns and, crucially, reworked enemy armor so that way more support weapons, air strikes, and even some primary guns rip straight through ...