
Kristina Killgrove
Kristina Killgrove is a staff writer at Live Science with a focus on archaeology and paleoanthropology news. Her articles have also appeared in venues such as Forbes, Smithsonian, and Mental Floss. Killgrove holds postgraduate degrees in anthropology and classical archaeology and was formerly a university professor and researcher. She has received awards from the Society for American Archaeology and the American Anthropological Association for her science writing.
Latest articles by Kristina Killgrove

Sun Chariot: An ornate Bronze Age treasure that may have featured in an ancient Nordic religious ceremony
By Kristina Killgrove published
This gold-covered bronze object may depict a "divine" horse pulling the sun behind it.

2,800-year-old royal tomb discovered near King Midas' home in Turkey
By Kristina Killgrove published
Turkey's minister of culture and tourism announced the discovery of a new tomb in an eighth-century-B.C. city that was the homeland of King Midas.

'Cone-headed' skull from Iran was bashed in 6,200 years ago, but no one knows why
By Kristina Killgrove published
The skull of a young woman found at a Copper Age cemetery in Iran has revealed evidence of cranial modification along with a serious traumatic injury.

Human evolution: Facts about the past 300,000 years of Homo sapiens
By Kristina Killgrove published
Discover interesting facts about the origin of the human species and what makes us different from our ape cousins.

Prosciutto di Portici: A portable sundial that looks like a pork leg — and it was likely owned by Julius Caesar's father-in-law before Mount Vesuvius erupted
By Kristina Killgrove published
This small bronze sundial was a portable way of telling time, but it may have made you hungry.

Celtic quiz: Test your knowledge about these fierce tribes once described by Julius Caesar
By Kristina Killgrove published
Is your knowledge of the Celts a veritable pot of gold, or do you need the luck of the Irish to finish the quiz?

'I did a bit of a dance': Detectorist finds gold 'mourning ring' engraved with skull and date in UK field
By Kristina Killgrove published
A British metal detectorist discovered a gold band with an engraved date-of-death in Norfolk.

Newly discovered 'ghost' lineage linked to ancient mystery population in Tibet, DNA study finds
By Kristina Killgrove published
A study of more than 100 genomes from people who lived in ancient China has unmasked a "ghost" in their midst.

2.2 million-year-old teeth reveal secrets of human relatives found in a South African cave
By Kristina Killgrove published
A cutting-edge technique for analyzing fossil tooth enamel is revealing remarkable new information about 2 million-year-old human relatives.

Genomes from ancient Maya people reveal collapse of population and civilization 1,200 years ago
By Kristina Killgrove published
Ancient DNA from people buried up to 1,600 years ago in Honduras have revealed clues to the rise and fall of the Maya.

'Trash' found deep inside a Mexican cave turns out to be 500-year-old artifacts from a little-known culture
By Kristina Killgrove published
When two spelunkers investigated what they thought was trash in a cave in Mexico, they discovered more than a dozen artifacts dating back centuries.

Ram in the Thicket: A 4,500-year-old gold statue from the royal cemetery at Ur
By Kristina Killgrove published
This statue covered in gold leaf and semiprecious stones may have been used in ancient Mesopotamian sunrise rituals.

Archaeologist sailed a Viking replica boat for 3 years to discover unknown ancient harbors
By Kristina Killgrove published
Archaeologist Greer Jarrett spent three years piloting a small sailboat along the coast of Norway to understand Viking trade routes.

Ancient Maya quiz: What do you know about the civilization that built pyramids across Mesoamerica?
By Kristina Killgrove published
Is your knowledge of the ancient Maya as extraordinary as their pyramids?

Rare face tattoos on 800-year-old mystery mummy baffle archaeologists
By Kristina Killgrove published
Analysis of a mummy kept for a century at the University of Turin in Italy has revealed rare face tattoos made with a special black ink.

Our teeth evolved from fish 'body armor' over 460 million years, scientists discover
By Kristina Killgrove published
Teeth are sensitive because they evolved from sensory tissue in both ancient vertebrates and ancient arthropods.

'It epitomises the strangeness of Sutton Hoo': 6th-century bucket found at Anglo-Saxon ship burial holds human cremation
By Kristina Killgrove published
Archaeologists found a cremation burial while examining the inside of a bucket from Sutton Hoo, a 1,400-year-old boat burial site in England.

Oseberg tapestry: Viking Age artwork from a boat burial that may depict the Norse tree of life
By Kristina Killgrove published
This tapestry also contains one of the only known depictions of a horned Viking helmet.

Humans reached southern South America by 14,500 years ago, genomes from 139 Indigenous groups reveal
By Kristina Killgrove published
A large-scale genome study shows that Indigenous peoples in the Americas split off several times, resulting in loss of important genetic diversity.

'Quite enigmatic': Rare stone carving of Assyrian king surrounded by gods discovered in Iraq
By Kristina Killgrove published
A massive stone carving featuring an Assyrian ruler and several deities has been found in Iraq.

'Ultimate adventure story': Submerged stone circles reveal perilous migration of prehistoric people to far northern Scotland 11,000 years ago
By Kristina Killgrove published
Stone tools and stone circles discovered in coastal Scotland show that prehistoric people settled farther north than anyone previously believed.

Viking DNA helps reveal when HIV-fighting gene mutation emerged: 9,000 years ago near the Black Sea
By Kristina Killgrove published
A study of more than 3,000 genomes has traced a gene mutation that confers HIV resistance to a person who lived near the Black Sea around 7000 B.C.

Hatnefer's heart scarab: An exquisite ancient Egyptian gold necklace inscribed with the Book of the Dead
By Kristina Killgrove published
A scarab beetle set in gold shows that ancient Egyptians thought the heart was the most important organ in the human body.
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