Archaeology
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Humans
European cave art gets older
Ancient illustrations in northern Spain date to more than 40,000 years ago.
By Bruce Bower -
Humans
Stone Age art gets animated
Cave paintings and decorated disks provided moving experiences in ancient Europe.
By Bruce Bower -
Humans
Maya wall calendar discovered
Classic-era structure displays rare calculations of lunar and planetary cycles.
By Bruce Bower -
Humans
From the ashes, the oldest controlled fire
A South Africa cave yields the oldest secure evidence for a blaze controlled by human ancestors.
By Bruce Bower -
Humans
Shelters date to Stone Age
Middle Eastern foragers inhabited dwellings for months at a time around 20,000 years ago.
By Bruce Bower -
Archaeology
Archaeoacoustics: Tantalizing, but fantastical
While compelling, findings lack scientific rigor.
By Nadia Drake -
Humans
Tools of a kind
People in southern Arabia around 100,000 years ago made tools like those of East Africans.
By Bruce Bower -
Humans
Neandertals’ mammoth building project
Stone Age people’s evolutionary cousins may have constructed earliest bone structures.
By Bruce Bower -
Humans
Humans’ entry into Europe pushed earlier
Homo sapiens fossils from Italy and England point to an early arrival and a longer time living alongside Neandertals.
By Bruce Bower -
Humans
Early farmers’ fishy menu
Northern Europeans retained a taste for aquatic foods after farmers arrived 6,000 years ago.
By Bruce Bower -
Humans
Stone Age paint shop unearthed
The discovery of tools for making a substance possibly used in body decoration suggests humans could invent and plan by 100,000 years ago.
By Bruce Bower -
Humans
Humans reached Asia in two waves
New genetic data show that some early migrants interbred with a mysterious Neandertal sister group.
By Bruce Bower