News
Neanderthals who lived 130,000 years ago crafted their tools from the bones of one of their deadliest predators.
The artist has lately been derided as a colonizer and a pedophile, the creep of the Post-Impressionists. A new book ...
A newly-discovered rock art panel on the western bank of the River Nile may depict an Ancient Egyptian authority figure from ...
4d
Discover Magazine on MSNNeanderthals May Have Ran Their Own Fat Factories 125,000 Years AgoThe Neumark-Nord site, discovered back in the 1980s, covers roughly 70 acres. In this region, Neanderthals hunted and ...
Scientists have revealed the most scientifically accurate reconstructions of what ancient humans would have looked like.
A new study reveals that Stone Age humans in Germany operated a 'fat factory' to extract nutrients from animal bones.
New DNA evidence challenges the timeline of human migration to Australia. The ongoing debate about the timeline of human ...
A newly published research paper has reignited debate about when humans first set foot in Australia, proposing a later date ...
So it was telling that the only victory on the floor that Democrats scored during the hours of drama this week leading up to Thursday’s final passage of the tax-cuts-for-the-rich, ...
As a new sculpture park opens outside Barcelona—and following Charli XCX’s album launch at Storm King Art Center—here are the ...
12d
Discover Magazine on MSNDid Neanderthals Bury Their Dead with Flowers? Shanidar Cave Findings Put Questions to RestLearn more about the Neanderthal remains uncovered in Shanidar Cave, and how evidence, such as flower seeds, could indicate that Neanderthals buried their dead.
The fingerprint, discovered on a painted pebble in a Spanish cave, represents the oldest known evidence of Neanderthal symbolic behavior in Europe.
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results