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Experts at the Vienna Museum provided a public presentation of the mass grave this week, which had the bodies of more than 100 people.
Carbon-14 analysis helped date the bones to between 80 and 130 A.D. That was cross-checked against known history of relics found in the grave – armor, helmet cheek protectors, the nails used in ...
Archaeologists think that as many as 150 individuals may have been hastily buried at the site, likely after a "catastrophic" military event ...
Carbon-14 analysis helped date the bones to between 80 and 130 A.D. That was cross-checked against known history of relics found in the grave – armor, helmet cheek protectors, the nails used in ...
Near the foot of one skeleton, the archaeologists also discovered shoe nails that came from distinctive Roman military shoes called caligae. The discovery of such skeletal remains is exceedingly ...
That was cross-checked against the known history of relics found in the grave — armor, helmet cheek protectors and the nails used in distinctive Roman military shoes known as caligae.
That was cross-checked against known history of relics found in the grave —armor, helmet cheek protectors, the nails used in distinctive Roman military shoes known as caligae. The most ...
Located in the Simmering district of Vienna, the mass grave holds the intertwined remains of at least 129 individuals. The excavation team also uncovered numerous dislocated bones, suggesting the ...
the nails used in distinctive Roman military shoes known as caligae. The most indicative clue came from a rusty dagger of a type in use specifically between the middle of the 1st century and the ...