After two decades of neglect, underwater archaeologists will soon explore a 200-year-old British shipwreck in the “Nightmare reef” off the coast of Mexico.
Described as a ‘triple threat,’ an unusual Medieval loo seat known as Helle’s Toilet may have been a status symbol – it only allowed three people to go number two at once.
William Donnelly famously discovered an archaeological site along the River Clyde in 1898. The artifacts found there became the subject of heated debate, discrediting him as an archaeologist and dividing the archaeological community. But has he been judged fairly?
After two decades of neglect, underwater archaeologists will soon explore a 200-year-old British shipwreck in the “Nightmare reef” off the coast of Mexico.
Described as a ‘triple threat,’ an unusual Medieval loo seat known as Helle’s Toilet may have been a status symbol – it only allowed three people to go number two at once.
William Donnelly famously discovered an archaeological site along the River Clyde in 1898. The artifacts found there became the subject of heated debate, discrediting him as an archaeologist and dividing the archaeological community. But has he been judged fairly?