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The hominins who lived at Gantangqing lived a heavily plant-based subsistence lifestyle. They had access to meat, and also ...
The finance industry has long struggled with outdated, manual processes that slow down operations and burden financial ...
New research reveals Stone Age foragers in Africa traveled miles to collect colorful stones, showing early trade, taste, and ...
Humans have been making and using wooden tools for over one million years, but since they decompose quickly, they rarely ...
In the hills of southwestern China, near the ancient shoreline of Fuxian Lake, a major archaeological discovery has reshaped ...
International research team from the University of Tübingen and the Senckenberg Nature Research Society finds early humans in ...
A groundbreaking discovery beneath a Scottish school has unveiled Neolithic timber halls older than Stonehenge.
Ancient wooden tools found at a site in Gantangqing in southwestern China are approximately 300,000 years old, new dating has shown. Discovered during excavations carried out in 2014–15 and 2018 ...
Stone tools from a cave on South Africa's coast speak of life at the end of the Ice Age by Sara Watson, The Conversation edited by Lisa Lock, reviewed by Andrew Zinin Editors' notes ...
New research indicates Dargan Shelter was occupied as early as the last Ice Age and repeatedly visited during this cold period.
Oldowan tools may look simple, but as a recent study shows, their origins are anything but straightforward. Image credit: The Natural History Museum, London / Science Source.
Maryland is home to many historical artifacts, but a discovery in Reisterstown dates back much further than you might expect - to the Stone Age.