Along the Aegean coastline in Turkiye (formerly Turkey), an all-female archeologist team recently discovered more than 130 ...
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30,000-year-old 'personal toolkit' found in the Czech Republic provides 'very rare' glimpse into the life of a Stone Age hunter-gatherer
The nature of the find indicates that the tools were bundled when deposited, likely in a container or case made from a perishable material, according to the study, which was published Aug. 13 in the ...
New research along Turkey’s Ayvalık coast reveals a once-submerged land bridge that may have helped early humans cross from ...
Stretching from western Anatolia to southeastern Europe, this previously unknown land bridge provides a whole new migration ...
Archaeologists have unearthed a set of "truly significant" Stone Age artifacts during an excavation being conducted ahead of planned road improvement in northern England, researchers told Newsweek.
An excavation in eastern Norway has uncovered traces of a dwelling and thousands of artifacts marking a shift some 9,000 ...
Part I published as American School of Prehistoric Research bulletin no. 49, 2007. Contents The Mousterian lithic assemblages from Kebara Cave / Liliane Meignen -- Dietary and health issues of the ...
An “emotional and inspiring” archaeological find of Paleolithic tools has revealed a long-lost prehistoric passage that may ...
A fallow buck deer with palmate antlers. A new study from Tel Aviv University identified the earliest appearance worldwide of special stone tools, used 400,000 years ago to process fallow deer. The ...
Continuous landmasses, now submerged, may have made it possible for early humans to cross between present-day Turkey and Europe, new research of this largely unexplored region reveals. Subscribe to ...
The prehistoric peopling of Europe has long been documented as occurring in waves from the western edge of Eurasia.
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