
Season 1 (2016)
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Episodes 30
Arkeo Italy - Heraclea: Fragances of Antiquity
In southern Italy, an archaeologist and a chemist are joining forces to achieve the impossible. Thanks to scientific advances and the alliance of archeology and chemistry, it is now possible to rediscover these forgotten fragrances.
Read MoreArkeo Australia - Dampier: the Great Book of the Aboriginals
In the Dampier archipelago, Australia, archaeologists are deciphering one of the greatest books ever written. A million motifs carved in the rocks by the aborigines that are gradually eroding this territory.
Read MoreArkeo Brazil - Capibara: The First Americans
In Serra da Capivara, a Franco-Brazilian team found traces of the very first Americans... Archaeologist Eric Boëda has discovered man-made tools fashioned out of quartz pebbles, and dated between 22,000 and 25,000 years BC…
Read MoreArkeo Chili - Easter Island: the Big Taboo
What if the veil was finally lifted on one of the greatest enigmas in the history of mankind, namely the disappearance of the Rapa Nui, the inhabitants of the mysterious Easter Island lost in the Pacific?
Read MoreArkeo Ethiopia - Lalibela: the Legend
A small town lost in the Ethiopian mountains, Lalibela, has attracted tens of thousands of Orthodox pilgrims every year for the past 800 years. They come to visit one of the 12 rock-hewn churches, listed as world heritage by UNESCO.
Read MoreArkeo Zimbabwe - Zambezii: Rediscovering the Past
In Zimbabwe, at the heart of the Zambezi plateau, African archaeologists are attempting to shed light on the history of Great Zimbabwe, one of the most fascinating sites in Africa.
Read MoreArkeo Saudi Arabia - Hegra: in the Footsteps of the Nabateans
In the Hijaz desert, lies a mysterious ancient city called Hegra. These vestiges are the signature of a legendary people called the Nabataeans. This lost necropolis had fallen into oblivion until UNESCO listed the site as World Heritage in 2008.
Read MoreArkeo Japan - Ichijôdani: a Return to the Source
In Ichijôdani, Japan, deep beneath the rice fields, archaeologists have excavated a medieval town abandoned 400 years earlier. In fact, they discovered an entire city as it was during the 16th century, with its streets, houses, and palaces.
Read MoreArkeo Guatemala - Tikal: Mayan Astrology, an Instrument of Political Power
The Maya flourished in the forests of Guatemala and Chiapas, before the arrival of the conquistadors in the sixteenth century. According to the recent findings of a team of archaeologists in Guatemala, astronomy was more than science for them.
Read MoreArkeo Peru - Pachacamac: the Lourdes of the Pre-columbian Era
In Peru, an Inca city buried under the desert sands has intrigued archaeologists for almost a hundred years. This ancient city is known as “Pachacamac”. Archaeologist Peter Eeckhout has finally discovered the reason for this strange desertion...
Read MoreArkeo Iran - Persepolis: the Persian Paradise
Nestled in the Iranian highlands, lies the cradle of the Persian Empire. Persians built the city of Persepolis, an architectural masterpiece. Recent discoveries are nevertheless shedding new light on Persepolis.
Read MoreArkeo Italy - Rome: Nero's Folly
In Italy’s capital city, archaeologists of the École Française de Rome have discovered an exceptional building that had been sought for centuries...
Read MoreArkeo Scotland - Orkney Islands: a Neolithic Pilgrimage
On the borders of Scotland, in the Orkney Islands, archaeologists have been digging for nearly 13 years the remains of a mysterious set of very large buildings surrounded by a massive stone wall erected during the late Neolithic.
Read MoreArkeo Spain - El Argar: a Forgotten Civilization
The "El Argar" civilization ruled over all of southern Spain between 2200 and 1550 BCE, until it suddenly disappeared. Spanish archaeologists have nevertheless found traces of the Argaric culture a few kilometers from the city of Murcia.
Read MoreArkeo Cambodia - Phonm Penh: the Origins of Angkor
In the mountains of Cambodia, 50 km from Angkor and its famous temples, archaeologist Jean-Baptiste Chevance tirelessly excavates the remains of Mahendraparvata, another vast ancient Khmer city.
Read MoreArkeo Peru - Nazca: the Secret of the Lines
The craziest theories have attempted to explain the famous Nasca lines. Astronomical calendar, divine frescoes, extra-terrestrial signals... Archaeologist Markus Reindel has been trying to bring science back at the forefront of this search for meaning.
Read MoreArkeo Siberia - Yakoutia: a Serbian Mystery
Yakutia extends beneath the polar circle to the east of Siberia. This land is home to a unique people whose origins were completely unknown until the recent discoveries of a team of archaeologists and geneticists.
Read MoreArkeo Peru - Lake Titicaca: the Sea of the Tiwanaku
Lake Titicaca was considered a sacred site by the Incas. In the 15th century, they made it the cradle of their civilization, the sun’s place of birth. And yet, beneath the lake’s waters, lies a different story.
Read MoreArkeo Turkey - Troy: Close to the Myth
Has the legendary city of Troy described by Homer in the Iliad ever existed? For centuries, the question has sparked much controversy. And if the answer is positive, did the Trojan War really take place?
Read MoreArkeo Peru - Trujillo: Twilight of the Mochicas
One of the driest deserts in the world lies at the foot of the Andes. 1,500 years ago, the Mochica culture, flourished in this environment. Between the 2nd and 8th century AD, they tamed the desert, and built huge adobe pyramids called “huacas”.
Read MoreArkeo Colombia - Tairona: the 'lost City' of the Tairona People
For nearly 400 years, one of the largest pre-Columbian cities remained unnoticed, submerged in the rainforest. Known for its gold, “cuidad perdida” remained a mystery until a team of Colombian archaeologists rediscovered it in the late 1970s.
Read MoreArkeo Greece - Crete: the Myth of the Labyrinth
The Minoan civilization flourished in Crete and demonstrated a high level of craftsmanship. A labyrinth sheltering a minotaur, royal palaces housing a tyrannical king…For a long time, the Greek myths served as the sole explanation for the architecture.
Read MoreArkeo Scandinavia - Greenland: a Viking Epic
The Vikings were capable sailors who colonized a number of islands such as England, Ireland, and further north, the Faroe Islands, and Iceland. Was Greenland the only territory to have resisted the Vikings?
Read MoreArkeo Mexico - Teotihuacan: the Birth of a Metropolis
Mexico City, with a population of 22 million, it is North America’s second-largest urban agglomeration after New York City...In fact, according to a team of archaeologists, this urban lifestyle takes its roots in Mexico.
Read MoreArkeo England - London: the Builders of Stonehenge
Stonehenge is one of the world’s most famous and most enigmatic prehistoric monuments. Dozens of huge standing stones were erected here during the Neolithic period, around 2900 BC... Who were the men and women who erected such a monument?
Read MoreArkeo Peru - the Chachapoyas: Living With the Dead
The Chachapoyas were long considered the fiercest warriors of the Andes. Recent archaeological discoveries paint a completely different. Far from being bloodthirsty and morbid, this people maintained an intimate and happy relationship with the deceased.
Read MoreArkeo South Africa - Drakensberg Park: the First Shamans of South Africa
For thousands of years, men have painted no less than 35,000 rock paintings on the walls of these caves. Nowhere else in the world can one find such a high number of rock artworks... What do these works tell us?
Read MoreArkeo Tanzania - Kilwa: the Forgotten History of the Swahili People
Along the eastern coast of Africa, the Swahili people has long intrigued scientists. It is believed that between the 10th and 15th centuries, the Swahili erected dozens of stone-built opulent cities in this area.
Read MoreArkeo Peru - Choquequirao: the Sacred Geography of the Incas
Situated in the heart of the Peruvian Andes, 160 km north of Cusco, Choquequirao is one of the greatest achievements of Inca architecture. Standing at an altitude of over 3000 meters overlooks one of the deepest canyons in the world.
Read MoreArkeo Amazonia - French Guiana: the Unknown People of the Amazon Forest
In the heart of the Amazon rainforest, archaeologists are busy debunking one of the most powerful myths put forward by colonization. The primeval forest, described in 1492 by Christopher Columbus, never existed!
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