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The Punic people had almost no genetic ties to Phoenicians, even though the latter founded the great city of Carthage.
Hollywood is pulling out the stops this summer movie season, which kicks off with Friday's release Marvel's "Thunderbolts*." ...
Superman's not the only legacy brand getting a splashy reintroduction this summer. A new Fantastic Four crew, assembled for ...
In the spring of 1852, U.S. Army Lt. John W. Gunnison, then working on a survey of the Great Lakes, wrote a letter to his Mormon friend, Albert Carrington in Salt Lake City. Among other things ...
The items displayed Syrian and Phoenician iconography in addition to central Assyrian ... The location of the three tombs. A 3D drawing of the second tomb. The main tomb of Yaba (a queen of ...
When spring arrives in Arizona, it’s not just the desert wildflowers that draw people out for a drive—it’s the siren call of smoky, slow-cooked meats wafting across the state. As temperatures hit that ...
Phoenician civilization emerged more than 3,000 years ago, centred around what is now Lebanon, before expanding across the Mediterranean Sea. Middle Eastern Phoenician city-states eventually fell ...
We find surprisingly little direct genetic contribution from levantine phoenicians to western and central mediterranean punic populations, says lead author Harald Ringbauer. Punic Necropolis of ...
The inhabitants of Carthage were long thought to have derived from Levantine Phoenicians. But an eight-year study suggests they were more closely related to Greeks. By Franz Lidz The Phoenicians ...
For centuries, the expansion of the Phoenician-Punic civilization across the Mediterranean was attributed to massive migrations. However, a recently published genetic study reveals that their success ...