Feature • March 7, 2020
Dinosaurs, the Ice Age, cavemen: Is the biblical timeline really at odds with scientific discoveries?
Feature • November 1, 2025
The multi-phase project to resurrect the history of the Ophel is now underway—and you can support this most-important enterprise!
Article • June 17, 2018
A tiny artifact with a big testament for biblical accuracy
Feature • June 27, 2023
A study into the debate about the earliest biblical chronogenealogies, found in Genesis 5 and 11—for which early textual variants (Masoretic, Septuagint, Samaritan) differ dramatically. Can we know which is correct?
Article • December 6, 2022
A brief overview of the secular timescale of history and its connection to the Bible
Article • December 26, 2022
Four cities, four gates: Are the similarities and dating enough evidence to support a Solomonic kingdom?
Feature • December 1, 2024
How archaeology and the biblical record link the Holy Land to ancient Spain
Article • February 8, 2023
“Whoever wore it was certainly affluent.”
Article • November 24, 2023
The discovery of a cache of hundreds of slingstones from the Chalcolithic period speaks to mankind’s perpetual cycle of war.
Article • October 15, 2024
Join AIBA, the Israel Antiquities Authority and other select partners on an archaeological journey to the core of ancient Jerusalem.
Feature • January 1
Which view does the Bible communicate—and the evidence reveal?
Article • May 26, 2024
This is the first discovery of the biblical status symbol in northern Europe.
Article • March 26, 2022
New details about the Mt. Ebal inscription
Feature • December 31, 2024
A small excavation with a big message
Article • October 26, 2018
What does a pharaoh’s conquest have to do with Israel?
Feature • January 7, 2019
How archaeological discoveries from the chief Philistine city correspond with biblical history
Feature • October 1, 2025
An interview with Prof. Naama Yahalom-Mack
Feature • April 30, 2022
Carbon dating can be an extremely helpful archaeological tool. But is it the reliable, objective silver-bullet solution it is often portrayed to be?
Article • March 5, 2018
The discovery of the Isaiah bulla adds to the evidence supporting the Bible.
Article • February 28, 2023
An ostracon discovered by visitors at Tel Lachish, bearing the name of Queen Esther’s father-in-law
Feature • April 30, 2025
This is one of Israel’s most important but least understood locations. But we are working to fix that.
Article • August 27, 2025
A capital fragment unveiled over two decades ago highlights another (architectural) link between ancient Israel and Spain.