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Archaeologists in disbelief as toddler discovers 3,800-year-old Egyptian scarab amulet First-of-its-kind archaeology breakthrough as researchers discover 1,800-year-old 'sacrificed' dog Archaeology ...
A 3-year-old girl on a family walk picked up an interesting-looking pebble that turned out to be a 3,800-year-old amulet. The Canaanite scarab amulet, which dates to the Middle Bronze Age, was ...
The alluring pebble turned out to be a 3,800-year-old Egyptian amulet, engraved with the design of an insect known as a scarab and dating from the Bronze Age, according to the Israel Antiquities ...
Visiting the Tel Azekah site with her family from their home in the Israeli settlement of Ramot Meir, she happened upon a 3,800-year-old scarab amulet. “We were walking along the path ...
The Anaheim Fire Department responded to a call of an on-fire vehicle inside a parking garage on the northwest side of Disneyland Resort in Anaheim, California on Friday morning. The fire and ...
The toddler, Ziv Nitzan, was visiting the archaeological site of Tel Azekah in southern Israel with her family when she found a scarab amulet believed to belong to Canaanite communities ...
They recognized the markings as those of a scarab, but ran the amulet through Google Lens to be sure before contacting the Antiquities Authority the next day. “There are thousands of stones over ...
She picked up a stone which turned out to be an ancient scarab amulet dating back 3,800 years. “Out of the 7,000 stones around her, she picked up one stone. Then she brushed off the sand and saw ...
Three-year-old Ziv Nitzan inadvertently discovered an ancient scarab amulet dating back 3,800 years in Beit Shemesh. The relic, a significant find for the Israel Antiquities Authority, highlights ...
A toddler on a family hike in Israel made a stunning archaeological find, uncovering an ancient scarab amulet at Tel Azekah, the legendary battlefield where David is said to have defeated Goliath.