Central Asia identified as a key region for human ancestors: it was a key route for some of the earliest hominin migrations
Findings show that the Vikings’ self-image was influenced by Ancient Rome; the research was carried out by Julie Lund
A 10,000-Year-Old Infant Burial Provides Insights Into the Use of Baby Carriers and Family Heirlooms in Prehistory
New analysis of obsidian blades reveals dynamic Neolithic social networks; the study has been published on PNAS
Researchers have shown that the Neanderthals at the Gabasa site in Spain appear to have been carnivores; the study is published on PNAS
Afragola was buried by an eruption of Vesuvius: the village offers a rare glimpse at how people lived in Italy in the Early Bronze Age
Rocky landscapes and population dispersal: social resistance of Bronze Age communities in response to emerging state societies in the Iberian Peninsula
Investigating the diploic veins in skulls with premature suture fusion: a new study has been published on the Journal of Morphology
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