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Discovery of 9,000-year-old hunter-gatherer tools in Senegal sheds light on African prehistory
What do we know about the last hunter-gatherers who lived in West Africa? While these prehistoric populations have been ...
The development of farming and introduction of livestock during the Neolithic Revolution was an opportunity for the African wolf and boosted populations, suggests study.
What do we know about the last hunter-gatherers who lived in West Africa? While these prehistoric populations have been extensively studied in Europe and Asia, their presence in this vast region — ...
Archaeology Farming began in North Africa about 7,500 years ago thanks to immigrants, DNA from Neolithic burials reveals News By Rafael M Martínez Sánchez published February 4, 2024 ...
His work has appeared in publications including Science News, Science, Nature, and Scientific American. Neolithic DNA Analysis from Northwest Africa Reveals Some Hunter-Gatherers Held Out On Farming ...
News Release 23-Sep-2024 Previously unknown Neolithic society in Morocco discovered: shining light on North Africa’s role in Mediterranean prehistory Peer-Reviewed Publication University of ...
Polished stone axe-heads, gouges, chisels and planes, small disk beads of amazon-stone, and serrated bivalve shells show that the culture was closely connected with that of the Fayum Neolithic a ...
New research shows that Neolithic migrants from Spain brought agriculture to Northern Morocco over 7,500 years ago.
But where’s the face?Scientists Found an 8,000-Year-Old Figurine in a Cave. Its Engravings Tell the Story of an Ancient Culture.
DNA from remains found in prehistoric North African burials reveals a mix of locals and immigrants who practiced farming.
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