A skull thought to belong to Cleopatra’s half-sister, Arsinoë IV, has actually turned out to be from an adolescent boy […] ...
An ancient skull that was found in Turkey close to a century ago does not belong to Cleopatra's younger, rebellious sister, ...
Scientists thought a tomb with similarities to buildings from Ptolemaic Egypt had been erected in memory of Cleopatra’s half ...
A new study reveals that the skull found in Ephesus, long believed to belong to Cleopatra’s sister Arsinoë IV, actually ...
Recent scientific analysis has identified a skull found in Ephesus, Turkey, originally thought to be Cleopatra's half-sister Arsinoë IV, as belonging to an adolescent boy with Treacher Collins ...
Recent scientific analysis has identified a skull found in Ephesus, Turkey, originally thought to be Cleopatra's half-sister Arsinoë IV, as belonging to an adolescent boy with Treacher Collins ...
Record-low soil moisture levels in Southern California amplify fire ri Northern California sees stable water levels, while Southern Californi Experts warn of prolonged drought conditions and potential ...
The skull, found in Turkey in 1929, was identified as an 11-year-old boy DNA analysis disproved links to Cleopatra's half-sister Arsinoë IV Study found the boy likely had Treacher Collins syndrome, ...
For decades, scientists had identified the skeleton as that of Arsinoe IV, the doomed half-sister of Cleopatra VII, one of Egypt's most famous queens. But a groundbreaking new analysis by ...
Researchers have revealed the decades-long mystery of a skull discovered in the ruins of Ephesus in 1929, debunking theories that linked the remains to Arsinoë IV, the sister of Cleopatra. A recent ...
Fig. 1: The cranium from the Ephesos Octagon in the Collection of the Department of Evolutionary Anthropology, University of Vienna. The yellowed note coming with it says: "Skull from Ephesus". C: ...
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 ...