THESSALONIKI, GREECE—According to an ArtNet News report, a marble head depicting Apollo, the ancient Greek god of archery, music, dance, healing, and poetry, has been uncovered in northern Greece at the site of Philippi by a team of researchers led by Natalia Poulos of the University of Thessaloniki. The 2,000-year-old sculpture shows a young man with curly hair and a laurel crown. It is thought to have been reused during the medieval period as an adornment on a town square fountain situated near an intersection of the city’s main roads. Last year, the researchers unearthed an ancient statue of Hercules that had also likely been reused as part of the medieval fountain. To read about the Hercules sculpture, go to "A Young Hercules."