Archaeology is not just about what has been lost. It is about what has never stopped speaking.
At Archeo.news, we cover the latest archaeological discoveries as they happen. The Living Past goes further — it asks the question that matters most : what does this discovery tell us about who we are today ?
Every civilisation that has ever risen and fallen has left us something — a technique, an idea, a warning, a dream. The cities buried under sand, the frescoes hidden in caves, the bones analysed in laboratories : they are not relics of a dead world. They are mirrors of our own.
The Living Past is our editorial space for reflection — where ancient discovery meets contemporary meaning, and where history becomes, once again, urgently alive.
Because the past never stops talking. We just need to listen.
Stephen Rimorini
- How Archaeology and History Have Always Shaped Human Culture
- Akrotiri ; The City That Survived Its Own Apocalypse
- Samarkand : 3,000 Years of Living History
- The voices we lost and how we find them again
- Palenque, the city that the jungle never forgot
- The Forbidden City, a palace built without a single nail
