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They have shown that many species, including humans, expanded their geographical ranges since the height of the last ice age, approximately 20,000 years ago. At this time, European ice sheets ...
At the height of the last ice age, which occurred approximately 20,000 years ago, many species, including humans, spread out geographically. By then, European ice sheets had reached Denmark and ...
Humans seem to have been adapted to the last ice age in similar ways to wolves and bears, according to our recent study, challenging longstanding theories about how and where our ancestors lived ...
Humans seem to have followed the same distribution pattern as brown bears in the last ice age. (Image credit: Volodymyr Burdiak via Shutterstock) This pattern includes Homo sapiens too.
New research reveals that early humans who took refuge in modern-day Spain and Portugal were the only Europeans to survive the last Ice Age.
Despite the abundance of theories about the arrival of humans in North America, there is one that is most accredited by ...
Humans lived in South America many thousands of years earlier than previously believed, during the height of the Last Ice Age. A new archaeological study discovered this by analyzing a trio of ...
Mammoths and other giant creatures of the Ice Age such as woolly rhinos survived longer than scientists thought, coexisting with humans for tens of thousands of years before they vanished for good ...
Humans lived in what is now Mexico up to 33,000 years ago and may have settled the Americas by ... This occurred during a period of climate warming at the end of the Ice Age called Greenland ...
Fire as organizing principle. Humanity and fire have been reforging the Earth since the end of the last glaciation, about 11,500 years ago.Generally, these changes have made landscapes more fire ...
Humans seem to have followed the same distribution pattern as brown bears in the last ice age. Volodymyr Burdiak/Shutterstock. This pattern includes Homo sapiens too. Neanderthals had already been ...