Hundreds of human bones have emerged from the River Thames in the last two centuries, most of them prehistoric.
Records from 500 years ago document floods, famine and death in 16th century Transylvania due to wild weather swings during the Little Ice Age.
Frost fairs on the River Thames have become a familiar cultural reference point for England's Little Ice Age. Our data shows that the river froze over a mere four times in the 16th century—in ...
Most of the skeletons found in the Thames River originate from the late Bronze Age and the early Iron Age, specifically dating from 2300 to 800 BCE and 800 BCE to 43 CE. By comparing their ...
Countless human bones have been found at the bottom of the River Thames in England, and some of them have been dated back to ...