News

Learning to control fire was a game-changer for ancient humans, who could use it to cook food, see at night, and endure cold ...
Ice Age Humans Built Fireplaces That Could be ‘Controlled’ According to the Purpose, Some Could Withstand Over 1112° F The ...
An Austrian site occupied by humans from around 24,000 to 20,000 years ago documents a switch towards hunting reindeer for ...
Stone Age humans mastered fire technology during Earth's harshest climate period 23,000 years ago, creating hearths that ...
Archaeological records indicate that prehistoric people in Europe relied on fire throughout the Ice Age—but the evidence ...
Theopetra Cave, in Greece, believed to be the oldest human construction on earth, reopened to the public after 9 years of ...
Clark, P. U. & Mix, A. C. Ice sheets and sea level of the last glacial maximum. Quaternary Science Reviews 21, 1-7 (2002). ———— Northern Hemisphere ice-sheet influences on global climate ...
For millennia, fire has been considered an essential element for human survival: it not only provided warmth in hostile ...
The expert told Tamás the discovery is likely a "fossilized inner horn, probably from a European bison that lived during the Last Glacial Maximum, between 100,000 and 25,000 years ago." ...
During the glacial–interglacial cycles of the past half million years, it took well over 50,000 years for continental ice sheets to grow to their maximum extent. In contrast, the transitions ...