The arbor vitae is a term used to describe the branching appearance of the white matter in the cerebellum, not in the cerebrum.
The arbor vitae is a term used to describe the branching appearance of the white matter in the cerebellum, not in the cerebrum.
It is a series of gold and silver tubes found at the end of the 19th century in a famous tomb in the Caucasus. Their function remained unknown, but we have just understood that they would be large straws allowing, in the Bronze Age, to collectively drink beer. Until now, the rods kept in the Hermita
What was the daily life of the citizens of ancient Rome like? This week, we suggest you investigate the routine and the daily life of a great civilization thanks to its domestic objects and the use made of its buildings , aspects that you can also learn about in the article “Living in the underwor
On February 22, 1939, the mission of the German Archaeological Institute led by the architect Arnold Nöldeke excavating in the Sumerian city of Uruk, in the southeast of present-day Iraq, found a marble sculpture representing the face of a woman. It was found in the area of the city where the te
Brittany still holds amazing treasures. Carved in stone, rare Gallic statues from the 1st century BC have just been identified by teams from Inrap (National Institute for Preventive Archaeological Research) , during archaeological excavations carried out in the Côtes-dArmor. Figure of a Gallic ari