News

A new study published in L’Anthropologie is shedding light on a remarkable discovery from Skhul Cave in Israel. Researchers ...
It has been claimed Neanderthals ate a huge amount of meat based on isotope ratios in their bones – but the explanation could ...
A famous prehistoric cave site in Belgium has yielded the oldest multifunctional tool of its kind. This Ice Age “Swiss Army ...
Scientists long thought that Neanderthals were avid meat eaters. Based on chemical analysis of Neanderthal remains, it seemed ...
By comparing cut marks on bones found at northern Israel caves, researchers find early humans clung to passed-down methods ...
According to new CT scans and models, parts of the 140,000-year-old skull resemble those of modern humans, while the jaw appears to be more similar to those of our extinct relatives ...
Neanderthals in two nearby caves used different techniques when butchering animal carcasses in what is now Israel, according ...
Neanderthals who lived 130,000 years ago crafted their tools from the bones of one of their deadliest predators.
"Humans picked up some Neanderthal DNA through interbreeding, while the Neanderthal population, always fairly small, was ...
For Neanderthal hunters equipped with wood and stone hunting tools, the place was a veritable buffet. And you might expect ...
Bone cut-marks suggest Neanderthals had distinct food traditions—possibly even early “family recipes.” A new study from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem has uncovered surprising clues about how ...