What ancient dung reveals about Epipaleolithic animal tending: a study about Abu Hureyra, published on PLoS One
Archaeological excavations in Romania reveal a possible ‘projectile workshop’ of early Homo sapiens, which may have changed their subsistence strategies compared to Neanderthals
The Upper Palaeolithic rock art of Côa Valley and Siega Verde lights a faint match to understand our history as humans
An article published in Science shows the origins of donkey domestication Africa in 5,000 B.C.E, around the time when the Sahara became the desert region we know today
New insights into the diet of people living in Neolithic Britain and found evidence that cereals, including wheat, were cooked in pots
Ancient DNA is rarely well-preserved in fossils, so scientists need to recognize possible hybridization of early humans from skeletons
Galería de las Estatuas in Atapuerca could be one of Spain’s most ancient Neanderthal sites; a new study published on Quaternary Geochronology
Sahelanthropus, the oldest representative of humanity, was indeed bipedal… but that’s not all! A new study on the subject on Nature
By analyzing DNA with the help of AI, an international research team has developed a method for dating archeological remains
New research shows Louisiana State University campus mounds as the oldest known man-made structures in North America