Some Neanderthals really enjoyed their surf and turf rather than mammoth steaks, according to a new study. The recent excavation of a cave site along Portugal's coast revealed a wealth of fossilized ...
Research focused on human remains found at the Troisième caverne of Goyet, a cave site in present-day Belgium that contains ...
These genomes are the oldest yet found of modern humans in Europe, though they were not the first hominids to walk these ...
There's more than one way to make a stone tool. That's according to a new analysis of artifacts from Lebanon and Italy, which determined that modern humans manufactured their tools in distinct ways in ...
Stone tools from the Lincombian–Ranisian–Jerzmanowician (LRJ) culture uncovered at Ranis. Item 1 is a partial bifacial blade point characteristic of the LRJ. Item 2 also contains finely made bifacial ...
New studies provide the first genetic evidence that humans interbred with Neanderthals in Europe. In 2002, archaeologists discovered the jawbone of a human who lived in Europe about 40,000 years ago.
Researchers at the site in Ranis, Germany, had to get around a massive rock to find the human-made tools. Researchers at the site in Ranis, Germany, had to get around a massive rock to find the ...
Whether Neanderthals thought symbolically and had an artistic sensibility has been a question that has vexed experts in human evolution. But evidence is mounting that our Stone Age cousins were our ...
Panel 78 in La Pasiega cave, which includes red horizontal and vertical lines that date to more than 64,000 years ago, long before Homo sapiens arrived in the area (photo by C.D Standish, A.W.G. Pike ...