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Stone tools crafted by ancient humans between 24,000 and 12,000 years ago that were recovered from coastal South Africa's ...
Those comparisons, laid out in a paper published in Quaternary Science Reviews, point to a surprising conclusion: the Baume ...
Dire wolves — or really, wolves with traits like the extinct species — are back. But New York has plenty of its own ...
Dr Thomas Strasser of Providence College, Rhode Island says “This is the first palaeolithic art ever found in Greece and it’s ...
Ice age people painted these animals 12,600 years ago.
Tools from South Africa’s Robberg caves match styles found in Namibia and Lesotho, suggesting early humans shared methods and ...
Ice Age hearths reveal how early humans mastered fire for warmth, cooking, toolmaking, and survival in extreme environments.
Archaeological records indicate that prehistoric people in Europe relied on fire throughout the Ice Age—but the evidence ...
Evidence from a prehistoric site at the shore of the Dnister river in modern-day Ukraine shows that people living during the ...
Whether for cooking, heating, as a light source or for making tools -- it is assumed that fire was essential for the survival of people in the Ice Age. However, it is puzzling that hardly any ...
Stone Age humans mastered fire technology during Earth's harshest climate period 23,000 years ago, creating hearths that ...
The private company Colossal Biosciences claims to have resurrected dire wolves through genetic editing. The resulting trio, ...