Early humans in the Hula Valley invested in systematic procurement of raw materials hundreds of thousands of years ago
Researchers has discovered evidence of a human presence at Tam Pà Ling, in mainland Southeast Asia, between 86,000 and 68,000 years ago
Stone tools tell a story of three waves of migration of the earliest Homo sapiens into Europe, according to a new study published in PLoS ONE
A reconstruction of the prehistoric temperatures for some of the oldest archaeological sites in the Alaskan Tanana Valley, North America
In a trio of papers, published simultaneously in the journal Science, a massive effort of genome-wide sequencing shows the lively genetic history of the Southern Arc region
Central Asia identified as a key region for human ancestors: it was a key route for some of the earliest hominin migrations
Genetic intermixing in Indonesia contributed to cultural “explosion” across the Pacific; a new study has been published on Nature Ecology and Evolution
Dramatic events in demographics led to the spread of Uralic languages; a new study has been published on Diachronica
Columbus was not the first European to reach the Americas, the Vikings got there centuries before, being already active in 1021 AD
Seafood might have helped those prehistoric pioneers, as they could have relied on shellfish to sustain them as they followed migratory routes out of Africa during times of drought