
-
US VP Vance says 'progress' in India trade talks
-
Ex-England star Youngs to retire from rugby
-
Black Ferns star Woodman-Wickliffe returning for World Cup
-
Kremlin warns against rushing Ukraine talks
-
Mbappe aiming for Copa del Rey final return: Ancelotti
-
US universities issue letter condemning Trump's 'political interference'
-
Pope Francis's unfulfilled wish: declaring PNG's first saint
-
Myanmar rebels prepare to hand key city back to junta, China says
-
Hamas team heads to Cairo for Gaza talks as Israel strikes kill 26
-
Pianist to perform London musical marathon
-
India's Bumrah, Mandhana win top Wisden cricket awards
-
Zurab Tsereteli, whose monumental works won over Russian elites, dies aged 91
-
Roche says will invest $50 bn in US, as tariff war uncertainty swells
-
Pope Francis's funeral set for Saturday, world leaders expected
-
US official asserts Trump's agenda in tariff-hit Southeast Asia
-
World leaders set to attend Francis's funeral as cardinals gather
-
Gold hits record, stocks mixed as Trump fuels Fed fears
-
Roche says will invest $50 bn in US over next five years
-
Fleeing Pakistan, Afghans rebuild from nothing
-
US Supreme Court to hear case against LGBTQ books in schools
-
Pistons snap NBA playoff skid, vintage Leonard leads Clippers
-
Migrants mourn pope who fought for their rights
-
Duplantis kicks off Diamond League amid Johnson-led changing landscape
-
Taliban change tune towards Afghan heritage sites
-
Kosovo's 'hidden Catholics' baptised as Pope Francis mourned
-
Global warming is a security threat and armies must adapt: experts
-
Can Europe's richest family turn Paris into a city of football rivals?
-
Climate campaigners praise a cool pope
-
As world mourns, cardinals prepare pope's funeral
-
US to impose new duties on solar imports from Southeast Asia
-
Draft NZ law seeks 'biological' definition of man, woman
-
Auto Shanghai to showcase electric competition at sector's new frontier
-
Tentative tree planting 'decades overdue' in sweltering Athens
-
Indonesia food plan risks 'world's largest' deforestation
-
Gold hits record, stocks slip as Trump fuels Fed fears
-
Trump helps enflame anti-LGBTQ feeling from Hungary to Romania
-
Woe is the pinata, a casualty of Trump trade war
-
'Like orphans': Argentina mourns loss of papal son
-
Trump tariffs torch chances of meeting with China's Xi
-
X rival Bluesky adds blue checks for trusted accounts
-
China to launch new crewed mission into space this week
-
Morocco volunteers on Sahara clean-up mission
-
Latin America fondly farewells its first pontiff
-
'I wanted it to work': Ukrainians disappointed by Easter truce
-
Harvard sues Trump over US federal funding cuts
-
2025 U.S. Open Polo Championship Final Concludes American High-Goal Season, Supported by U.S. Polo Assn.
-
'One isn't born a saint': School nuns remember Pope Francis as a boy
-
Battling Forest see off Spurs to boost Champions League hopes
-
'I don't miss tennis' says Nadal
-
Biles 'not so sure' about competing at Los Angeles Olympics

9,000-year-old ritual complex found in Jordan desert
Archaeologists deep in the Jordanian desert have discovered a 9,000-year-old ritualistic complex near what is thought to be the earliest known large human-built structure worldwide.
The Stone Age shrine site, excavated last year, was used by gazelle hunters and features carved stone figures, an altar and a miniature model of a large-scale hunting trap.
The giant game traps the model represents -- so-called "desert kites" -- were made of long walls that converge to corral running gazelles into enclosures or holes for slaughter.
Similar structures of two or more stone walls, some several kilometres (miles) long, have been found in deserts across Saudi Arabia, Syria, Turkey and Kazakhstan.
The Neolithic-era ritual site was discovered inside a larger campsite last October by a joint French-Jordanian team called the South Eastern Badia Archaeological Project.
The nearby desert kites in Jibal al-Khashabiyeh are "the earliest large-scale human built structures worldwide known to date," said a statement by the SEBA Project.
It hailed the "spectacular and unprecedented discovery" of the ritualistic site, believed to date to about 7000 BC.
It featured two steles with anthropomorphic features, the taller one 1.12 metres high, other artefacts including animal figurines, flints, and some 150 arranged marine fossils.
The wider, decade-old research project aims to study "the first pastoral nomadic societies, as well as the evolution of specialised subsistence strategies".
The desert kites suggest "extremely sophisticated mass hunting strategies, unexpected in such an early timeframe," said the project's statement.
The sacral symbolism was most likely meant "to invoke the supranatural forces for successful hunts and abundance of prey to capture," it said.
The teams of researchers have also found campsites with circular dwellings and large numbers of gazelle bones.
The project is a collaboration of Jordan's Al Hussein Bin Talal University and the French Institute of the Near East.
French ambassador Veronique Vouland-Aneini hailed the "outcome for both the scientific world and Jordan", saying "it provides us with a priceless testimony of the historical life in the Middle East, its traditions and rituals".
D.Schneider--BTB