The Alien Deception Chronicles

A Short-Form Theological Thriller Series

Roman archaeology

  • Newly Identified Roman Fortlet Reveals the Hidden Infrastructure of an Empire

    Newly Identified Roman Fortlet Reveals the Hidden Infrastructure of an Empire

    Archaeologists in Scotland have uncovered a previously unknown Roman fortlet beneath residential gardens along the Antonine Wall, revealing stone foundations, a defensive rampart and ditch, and Roman pottery. The find highlights the strategic role of small frontier outposts in the empire’s northernmost boundary and underscores the remarkable engineering and organization of ancient Roman infrastructure.

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  • The Sealed Etruscan Tomb: Unearthing a Forgotten Spiritual World

    The Sealed Etruscan Tomb: Unearthing a Forgotten Spiritual World

    A sealed 7th-century B.C. Etruscan tomb northwest of Rome has revealed four skeletons and more than 100 grave goods, offering a rare, intact look at elite burial customs before Rome’s rise. The discovery highlights the sophistication of Etruscan society and shows how modern archaeology continues to uncover human achievements that fuel both scholarship and speculation.

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  • Advanced Drone Mapping Uncovers a Hidden Roman City

    Advanced Drone Mapping Uncovers a Hidden Roman City

    Archaeologists in southern Italy have uncovered an unknown ancient Roman city near the Via Appia using drone-based thermal and multispectral imaging. The buried site reveals a grid of streets, forums, and theaters, reshaping ideas about Roman urban planning. The discovery also highlights how advanced sensing technology changes what we can detect and how we interpret…

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  • The Hidden Religion Beneath Rome’s Empire

    The Hidden Religion Beneath Rome’s Empire

    A newly uncovered Roman Mithraeum in Bavaria sheds light on the mystery cult of Mithras, a private religion built around graded initiation, symbolic architecture, and controlled access to knowledge. The discovery highlights how Mithraism spread through Roman military and administrative networks and reveals a broader pattern of layered, compartmentalized understanding within imperial society.

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  • “Port Talbot’s Pompeii”: The Roman Mega-Villa That Makes Britain’s Past Look Edited

    “Port Talbot’s Pompeii”: The Roman Mega-Villa That Makes Britain’s Past Look Edited

    Archaeologists at Margam Country Park near Port Talbot, South Wales, have uncovered the footprint of what may be the largest Roman villa complex ever found in Wales. Detected by ground-penetrating radar, the 4th-century site suggests a major agricultural center and points to a more complex, productive Roman presence in Wales than previously assumed.

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