News

In 1988, archaeologists uncovered the grave of a Mesolithic woman who lived in Belgium's Meuse Valley 10,500 years ago. At ...
A new study from SapienCE reveals that early modern humans at Blombos Cave in South Africa used ochre as a specialized tool ...
The facial reconstruction, part of the university’s Regional Outlook on Ancient Migration (ROAM) project, reveals that the ...
The detailed reconstruction brings the prehistoric hunter-gatherer to life, revealing an intriguing set of features.
Using well-preserved ancient DNA, researchers have created a life-like facial reconstruction of a woman who lived in ...
Manuscripts, music and lyric drafts, recordings, notebooks and scrapbooks from Stephen Sondheim have been donated to the Library of Congress. They offer the public a chance to see firsthand the ...
In prehistoric communities across what is now northeastern Europe, decorative ornaments with animal teeth were a regular ...
DNA from Stone Age ‘chewing gum’ tells an incredible story. For the first time, scientists used 5,700-year-old saliva to sequence the complete human genome of an ancient hunter gatherer, as ...
Some areas of modern Europe were pretty populated during the Stone Age. Archeological evidence shows that settlements in present day Ukraine may have had 10,000 to 15,000 people living there.
We found that even a small human population, numbering between 3,000 and 7,000, could have easily driven first dwarf hippos, and then dwarf elephants, to extinction. Our model showed the process ...
08/06/2024 August 6, 2024. Stone Age people were by no means dull cave dwellers. Breathtaking finds in the caves of the Danube Valley in southern Germany show what they were capable of.