Cook like a Neanderthal: Scientists try to replicate ancient butchering methods to learn how Neanderthals ate birds
Multiple temporary campsites reveal that ancient people hunted gomphotheres, extinct elephants, at Tagua Tagua Lake in Chile, 12,000 years ago
14,500 to 10,500 years ago, prehistoric peoples harvesting vegetation from the Shubayqa wetlands of eastern Jordan created a habitat for birds
Evidence of ancient breeding of scarlet macaws in today’s New Mexico in the 1100s, according to a study in PNAS Nexus
Research reveals human-driven changes to distinctive foraging patterns in North Pacific Ocean. The first large-scale study for this subject
The recent results of the excavation of Figueira Brava (Portugal) now confirm that Neanderthals habitually used marine resources
The discovery of Alcmonavis poeschli has implications for the debate over whether active flapping birds arose from gliding birds
The new species, named Ambopteryx longibrachium, belongs to the Scansoriopterygidae, one of the most bizarre groups of non-avian theropods