
An unseen industry: When Neanderthals turned bone into tools
Like modern humans, Neanderthal made and used bone tools for their daily needs.
Discover here the comprehensive, latest news on Space & Astronomy, Archaeology, Biology, and all new strange and bizarre things.
Like modern humans, Neanderthal made and used bone tools for their daily needs.
The discovery implies that early people had mastered complex surgical procedures, having detailed knowledge of anatomy beyond our imagination.
According to the scientists, A secret world of animals and plants – including unknown species – might live in warm caves under Antarctica's glaciers.
Ice skates made of bone have been unearthed from a Bronze Age tomb in western China, suggesting an ancient technological exchange between the east and west of Eurasia.
Simon Fraser University scientists say their research on the latest fossil find near Princeton, BC is raising questions about how the dispersal of animals and plants occurred across the Northern…
The scientific name of the species is 'Promachocrinus fragarius' and according to the study, the name Fragarius is derived from the Latin word "fragum," which means "strawberry."
The silver used to make an ancient Egyptian queen's bracelets came from Greece, a new analysis finds, offering insight into the Old Kingdom's trade networks.
The ultra-black skin of the species enables them to hide in the pitch-dark depths of the ocean in order to ambush their prey.
The discovery of human artifacts made from a long-extinct sloth bones pushes back the estimated date of human settlement in Brazil to 25,000 to 27,000 years.
A recent archaeological excavation in Kluczkowice, Poland unearthed a unique find of Roman and Egyptian gods together. This included two ancient Egyptian bronze figurines of fertility and agriculture god, Osiris, from the 1st millennium BC, and a 1st century AD bust of Bacchus, the Roman wine god.