With the evidence uncovered by paleontologists, an artist sketched El Bosque Petrificado Piedra Chamana as it might have looked long before humans.
Mariah Slovacek/NPS-GIP
Using remnants of fossilized trees, scientists and an artist figured out what the forest looked like long before humans existed.
Drought’s effects on the population slowed the Ottoman Empire’s expansion in the 16th century.
Lessing Archives
Drought has been a threat multiplier for centuries, fueling conflict and migration from the time of the Ottoman Empire to Syria today.
Jodie Turner-Smith as Anne Boleyn.
Channel 5/PA
Historically inaccurate portrayals of Anne Boleyn aren’t new, and artistic license is vital to telling her story.
Dockside Reading: how dockside protocols shaped copyright and censorship.
Getty Images
How colonial Customs protocols shaped copyright and censorship.
Hundreds of active oil wells are hiding in plain sight across the Los Angeles area.
David McNew/Getty Images
Photos from the early 1900s show LA’s forests of oil derricks. Hundreds of wells are still pumping, and new research finds people living nearby are struggling with breathing problems.
People across Canada, including this scene in Edmonton, have left shoes and candles at public displays in recognition of the discovery of children’s remains at the site of a former residential school in Kamloops, B.C.
THE CANADIAN PRESS/Jason Franson
Ground-penetrating radar located the remains of 215 First Nations children in a mass unmarked grave, revealing a macabre part of Canada’s hidden history.
Protesters march and hold up posters along the streets of Hamilton to support anti racism and Black Lives Matter.
(Shutterstock)
The Canadian response to racism south of the border can be described as an Americanization of Canadian history.
www.shutterstock.com
Chinese people have been in New Zealand for over 180 years, but their remarkable story will remain widely unknown if it isn’t taught in schools.
Archaeology increasingly involves science, leading to courses like Bioarchaeology.
University of York
The government plans to cut university subsidy for teaching archaeology by 50%, yet it’s never been more relevant to society.
Le Petit Trianon.
Shutterstock
A queen with a reputation for scandal, Marie Antoinette enjoyed her private spaces with a small circle of friends. A mirrored room kept the judgments of the outside world at bay.
The left photo shows a Kodak booth in Australia in the 1930s. The right photo is it colourized using the software program DeOldify.
(Museums Victoria/Unsplash, DeOldify)
The algorithm has become a new way of capturing reality automatically, and it demands a heightened ethical engagement with photos.
‘Ako: A Tale of Loyalty’ takes players inside a young samurai’s world in 18th-century Japan.
Epoch: History Games Initiative/University of Texas at Austin
A history professor describes how student-designed video games have transformed his classroom and provided a substitute for academic essays.
In Altered Carbon, bodies just become ‘sleeves’ for downloaded human brains to occupy.
Netflix
Leaving our earthly bodies and living forever as a machine isn’t just a thing of modern science fiction. These transhumanist ideas date back to the 18th century.
Engraving of a man drinking plague water during the 1665 London outbreak.
Wellcome Collection
To stave off illness and melancholy, moderate drinking was advised by doctors.
Shutterstock
Boundaries aren’t just treaties. They’ve been built from rivers, oral history and newspaper notices — and rocks in the way of farmers.
Pictorial Press Ltd/Alamy
Commemorations have slowly become more muted over the years due to the racist and misogynistic aspects of his rule
The Battle of Tewkesbury was a major episode in the War of the Roses.
Wikimedia
The French meddled in the civil war between the Yorks and Lancasters, hoping for an outcome that would favour them.
Scotland’s Robert the Bruce defeated a much larger English army at the Battle of Bannockburn.
Shutterstock
Hastings and Bannockburn didn’t exactly bring people together, but they remind us that the component parts of the UK are inextricably linked.
AAP/Ten
Where are they now? It’s half a century since Young Talent Times aired on Australian television. It changed its young stars and audiences.
www.shutterstock.com
As trans-Tasman borders re-open and in the wake of the Christchurch attacks, Anzac Day gains new meaning and presents new challenges – just as it has always done.