A new analysis indicates the human remains found in a well in Norway are from a 1197 raid described in a royal history.
Stavanger is the third-largest city in Norway and is located in the southwest of the Scandinavian country. More From Newsweek ...
The down found in the ship could have filled at least 31 duvets. An archaeology professor has a theory about what it might ...
STAVANGER, Norway (AP) — In 1965, a Norwegian woman gave birth to a baby girl in a private hospital. Seven days later she ...
A common criticism of women's sports is that female players aren't as entertaining or skilled as their male counterparts. Two ...
The post holes they uncovered reveal building techniques typical of the Viking Age, suggesting the presence of a longhouse, ...
A University of Rochester probe found Ranga Dias manipulated data, including in a paper claiming the discovery of a ...
The basis for the article published in Qualitative Research was a paper for the course "Topics in Interdisciplinary Queer Studies: Autoethnography" at the University of Stavanger, Norway. The research ...
"This book is important, thought-provoking and a wonderful addition to the scholarly literature." Ingrid Alexander-Skipnes, University of Stavanger, International Journal of the Classical Tradition ...
David Loberg Code has been a Fulbright Scholar and visiting researcher at the University of Oslo in Norway and the Norwegian ... and dance and has taught at the International Workshops in Stavanger, ...
Ten years ago, Chancellor Sam Hawgood made the case UC San Francisco was at an important inflection point in its history ...