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Articles Written by: ANDREW CURRY
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From ANDREW CURRY,
Science,
5 Nov 2009
Archaeologists in Germany have found a life-sized bronze Roman horse's head at the bottom of a well. It's the first such find in Germany, and it suggests that the Romans had a more settled presence in ancient Germany than historians had thought.
War ...
From ANDREW CURRY,
Science,
27 Aug 2009
From the ground, a 100-hectare site just north of Italy's Venice airport looks like nothing more than rolling fields of corn and soybeans. But it's actually home to a buried Roman metropolis called Altinum, considered the precursor of ancient Venice. ...
From ANDREW CURRY,
Science,
30 Jul 2009
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From ANDREW CURRY,
Science,
23 Jul 2009
May 27, 2009 | Since the terror attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, racial or ethnic profiling has been a source of controversy worldwide. While it makes intuitive sense to many people that certain groups are more likely to be involved in terrorism than others, ...
From ANDREW CURRY,
Salon,
26 May 2009
An ivory statuette of a well-endowed woman discovered in Germany suggests that humanity's earliest art might have been of the erotic variety. Digging in a cave near Stuttgart last fall, University of Tübingen archaeologist Nicholas Conard unearthed ...
From ANDREW CURRY,
Science,
13 May 2009
In 1991, Klaus Teuber was well on his way to becoming one of the planet's hottest board game designers. Teuber (pronounced "TOY-burr"), a dental technician living with his wife and three kids in a white row house in Rossdorf, Germany, had created a ...
From ANDREW CURRY,
Wired,
2 Apr 2009
Related Topics:
Porsche
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From ANDREW CURRY,
Science,
26 Feb 2009
Think of it as a testosterone-soaked sandbox: a German amusement park where, instead of standing in line to ride on roller coasters, you get to play with big, loud machines. For 219 euros (about $280), patrons can spend the day operating 29-ton ...
From ANDREW CURRY,
Wired,
25 Dec 2008
Related Topics:
Komatsu
HANOVER, GERMANY--Metal-detector hobbyists have stumbled upon what may be one of the largest intact Roman battlefields ever discovered. The site, located about 100 kilometers south of here and revealed today by archaeologists, dates to about 200 C.E. ...
From ANDREW CURRY,
Science,
15 Dec 2008