A new study presents a synthesis of human occupation in the Iberian Peninsula Atlantic margin during the Early and Middle Paleolithic, and highlights the African affinities of Acheulean industry in southwestern Europe
Reconstructing how the landscape in this zone evolved is key to understanding how the Neanderthals occupied the Pre-Pyrenees territory
The recent results of the excavation of Figueira Brava (Portugal) now confirm that Neanderthals habitually used marine resources
On the land where Cordoba is located in the 21st century, two cities coexisted in the past, each on a hill: an Iberian and a Roman one
Researchers have studied the evidence of prehistoric societies in the Neolithic Period in the Iberian Peninsula from the perspective of gender
Marine fossils from Portugal, that lived between 470 and 459 million years ago, are filling a gap in understanding evolution during the Middle Ordovician
A new study tells the genetic history of the domestic horse over the last 5,000 years by using the largest genome collection ever generated for a non-human organism
Prehistoric Iberians created “imitation amber” by repeatedly coating bead cores with tree resins, according to a new study
Seven remains of antler mining tools were found in the quarry of Pozarrate, one of Spain’s most important Neolithic flint mining operations
Two studies, one looking at Iberian hunter-gatherers between 13,000 and 6,000 years ago and another looking at Iberian populations over the last 8000 years, add new resolution to our understanding of the history and prehistory of the region