Archaic humans were selective hunters, not mass slaughterers, new study reveals
A new study from Israel is shedding new light on how extinct relatives of modern humans hunted large animals, and ...
Scientific insights into osteoarchaeology, analyzing human and animal bones to reconstruct ancient health, diet, and lifestyles.
A new study from Israel is shedding new light on how extinct relatives of modern humans hunted large animals, and ...
For tens of thousands of years, dogs have been in symbiosis with people across the vast range of Eurasia, but ...
Researchers have confirmed the identity of skeletal remains found over a century ago on Margaret Island in Budapest, solving a ...
A mummified head housed in Switzerland for more than a century is rewriting what experts thought they knew about its ...
A recent archaeological study in southern Sweden has revealed new insights into the medieval disability experience. The study by Lund ...
In a discovery that pushes the history of human innovation back nearly 300,000 years, archaeologists in Ukraine have excavated the ...
An international team of researchers, including faculty from Binghamton University, has documented the first case of Down syndrome in Neanderthals. ...
Recent research on skeletal remains from the ancient Egyptian necropolis of Abusir, dating back to the 3rd millennium BCE, has ...
Archaeologists at the University of Mississippi, in collaboration with medical experts, have unearthed a rare medical anomaly in the burial ...
by Simon Mays (Author) Publisher: Routledge; 3rd edition Publication date: March 2, 2021 Language: English Print length: 452 pages ISBN-10: ...
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