News

Archaeologists previously assumed that East Asia did not see considerable tool development during the Middle Paleolithic, but ...
A group of archaeologists and scientists, led by Professor Karen Hardy from the University of Glasgow, has discovered ...
A surprising archaeological discovery in southwest China is shaking up what scientists thought they knew about ancient humans ...
New archaeological finds in Malta add to an emerging theory that early Stone Age humans cruised the open seas.
We know this from tiny scratches and chips on the scrapers that match traces caused by working these materials in experiments using contemporary stone tools. European archaeologists believe that ...
Neanderthals and Denisovans emerged and began developing new stone tools. Archaeologists have found evidence of these dynamic changes taking place in Africa, Europe and western Asia, but they hadn ...