News

A new theory suggests the biblical Garden of Eden could be hidden beneath Egypt’s Great Pyramid of Giza, challenging ...
A provocative new theory suggests that the original Garden of Eden may not have been in Mesopotamia ... where the Tigris and Euphrates rivers are found, rather than in Egypt (above).
Mesopotamia, a region that includes all of modern-day Iraq as well as parts of Syria, Turkey and Iran, formed a significant part of the Fertile Crescent. Located between the Tigris and Euphrates ...
Archaeologists working at a long-buried city in northern Iraq have unearthed clues that could rewrite part of Mesopotamia’s hidden story. The site, Kurd Qaburstan, sits in the Erbil region and may ...
A new paper by computer engineer Dr Konstantin Borisov stakes an attention‑grabbing claim: the biblical Garden of Eden ...
Traditionally, biblical scholars have associated the Garden of Eden with Mesopotamia, defined by the Tigris and Euphrates rivers in modern-day Iraq. To support his claim, Borisov delved into ...
Traditionally, many have believed the Garden of Eden was located in Mesopotamia, based on the mention of four rivers in the Bible: the Tigris, Euphrates, Pishon, and Gihon. Scholars have ...
which then divides into four rivers: Pishon, Gihon, Tigris (Hiddekel), and Euphrates, suggesting its location was in southern Mesopotamia, now known as Iraq. While the Middle East theory is among ...
Atatürk Dam is Turkey’s largest. Named after Kemal Atatürk, the country’s founder, the dam was built on the Euphrates River in the 1980s as part of Turkey’s sweeping Southeastern Anatolia ...
As Iraq fitfully rebuilds, a groundbreaking exhibition is showcasing that nation’s rich roots in Mesopotamia ... the land between the Tigris and Euphrates rivers in the center of a vast ...
The Huwaizah, East and West Hammar and Central Marshes of the Ahwar are predominantely fed by the Tigris and Euphrates Rivers. The Huwaizah Marshes ... expressions of successive cultures in southern ...