The Biggest Archaeological Discoveries in Recent History

  • Deir el-Bahari necropolis, Egypt
Deir el-Bahari necropolis, Egypt
Credit: Print Collector/ Hulton Archive via Getty Images
Author Kristina Wright

March 19, 2025

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From lost cities to ancient maps, modern archaeological discoveries have transformed our understanding of the past. Experts now use cutting-edge tools such as Lidar, deep-sea scanning, and radiocarbon dating to uncover long-forgotten sites and artifacts — and they’re rewriting history in the process. 

In recent years, these advancements have led to the discovery of the oldest European map, a remarkably preserved Greek shipwreck, and the tomb of a pharaoh who was almost lost to history. Each of these finds sheds new light on ancient civilizations, revealing how people traveled, built their cities, and honored their dead. Here are five incredible discoveries made since 2014, reminding us that history always has secrets just waiting to be uncovered.

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The Oldest Known European Map

When the Saint-Bélec Slab, a Bronze Age carved stone, was first discovered in 1900 in France, it was largely overlooked and remained forgotten for more than a century. In 2014, researchers rediscovered the 5-by-6.5-foot stone slab in a French castle and decided to investigate further. Using modern techniques, Bournemouth University’s Clément Nicolas and his team analyzed the 4,000-year-old artifact and noted that the carvings on one side of the slab resembled a map.

Their research revealed that the engraved lines and repeated symbols represented the Odet river valley in western Brittany, making the artifact an early example of cartography. Comparing the markings to a modern map, they found an 80% accuracy match, confirming that the Saint-Bélec Slab is the oldest known map depicting a territory in Europe. This discovery offers insights into the territorial organization and mapping skills of Bronze Age societies and could lead to the discovery of previously unknown ancient sites.

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These Are the Oldest Recorded Recipes

  • Cuneiform tablet
Cuneiform tablet
Credit: Gorodenkoff/ Shutterstock
Author Mark DeJoy

May 1, 2024

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Determining the oldest recipe in history seems like it would be tricky right from the outset — anyone who’s ever asked an older relative for a recipe knows that often, the ingredients and instructions for a favorite meal have never even been written down. Yet historians do have a fairly clear answer for what the oldest known written culinary recipes are, and they date back more than 3,700 years. 

In 1911, Yale University purchased four clay tablets that had been unearthed from Mesopotamia, the ancient valley between the rivers Tigris and Euphrates (around modern-day Iraq). The tablets were inscribed in the cuneiform Akkadian language, and scholars estimate that three of them date back to around 1730 BCE. Since Akkadian is an extinct language, the actual content of the cuneiform was a mystery at the time the university acquired the tablets. It wasn’t until 1933 that any conclusions were made as to the contents of the script — and even then, the curator of the Yale Babylonian Collection misinterpreted the texts as recipes for medicinal remedies. 

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6 Things You Didn’t Know About the Rosetta Stone

  • The Rosetta Stone
The Rosetta Stone
Credit: Kean Collection/ Archive Photos via Getty Images
Author Rachel Gresh

March 27, 2024

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The Rosetta Stone, an ancient artifact discovered in Rosetta, Egypt, in 1799, was the key to unlocking the centuries-old mystery of Egyptian hieroglyphics. The black granite stone is a “stela” — a large standing slab used by ancient civilizations as a marker, typically for dedications or commemorations — inscribed with a text known as the “Decree of Memphis.” The text is, frankly, somewhat dull: It outlines the achievements of Ptolemy V Epiphanes, who ruled Egypt from 205 to 180 BCE. However, it’s not the subject of the stone but the script itself that is important. 

The text is written in both Egyptian hieroglyphs and ancient Greek script. Because the ancient Greek and modern Greek languages are so similar, the Greek inscription served as the starting point for translating the Rosetta Stone. Using the Greek script, researchers translated the language of ancient Egypt for the first time in history. However, there is much more to this story than a simple translation. Shrouded in mystery and nearly destroyed by several wars, the Rosetta Stone has fascinated historians for centuries. Here are six surprising facts about this important discovery.

Credit: Universal History Archive/ Universal Images Group via Getty Images

The Stone Features Two Forms of Egyptian Writing

It’s widely known that the Rosetta Stone features text written in both Egyptian hieroglyphics and the ancient Greek alphabet,  allowing scholars to decipher the previously mysterious ancient symbols. However, the stone isn’t a bilingual message — it’s trilingual. The third script on the stone is Egyptian demotic, a cursive form of Egyptian hieroglyphics that was also undeciphered before the discovery of the Rosetta Stone. It was used in ancient Egypt from the early seventh century BCE until the fifth century CE for business and literary purposes. By the time of the Ptolemaic period (304 to 30 BCE), rulers of Egypt were of Greco-Macedonian descent (following Alexander the Great’s conquest of the region). Around this time, Egyptian demotic and hieroglyphics began to decline in favor of the Greek writing system, which is why all three scripts were etched on the stone.

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