Cooking for the craft: new study reveals how prehistoric people extracted animal teeth to produce ornaments
A new study about how people in the ancient Mesopotamian region (within modern day Iraq) experienced emotions in their bodies thousands of years ago
Finnish prehistoric rock paintings (5000–1500 BCE) on the cliffs rising directly from the lakes are acoustically special environments
The best-preserved earthen building in the western Mediterranean at Casas del Turuñuelo shows Tartessos culture’s sustainable constructions skills
Was “witchcraft” in the Devil’s Church in Koli based on acoustic resonance? – The crevice cave has a unique soundscape
In Moravia, ravens were attracted to humans’ food more than 30,000 years ago, according to a new study published in Nature Ecology and Evolution
The world’s first horse riders: researchers discovered evidence by studying the remains of human skeletons found in burial mounds called kurgans
Shepherds of the Earth is a film by award-winning Finnish director Iiris Härmä that tells a fascinating story about about the Cradle of Humankind, the struggle of nomadic peoples to survive
Human bones were used for making pendants in the Stone Age, on the island of Yuzhniy Oleniy Ostrov on Lake Onega
Friendship ornaments from the Stone Age: skilfully manufactured slate ring ornaments were fragmented on purpose, using pieces of rings as tokens