Researchers led by Dr. Alexandros Karakostis from the Institute for Archaeological Science and the Senckenberg Center for ...
The discovery has been published in the recent study in the open-access journal PLOS ONE by Talia Yashuv and Leore Grosman of ...
Archaeologists thought they had found one grave, but excavation efforts turned up a treasure trove of ancient tools and coins ...
When faced with an assortment of 12,000-year-old perforated pebbles from an archaeological site in northern Israel, ...
An analysis looking at the hand bones of australopithecines, apes and humans reveals that tool use likely evolved before the ...
The discoveries include pottery fragments, stone tools, bones, charcoal, burial evidence ... Collaborative research efforts ...
Early human cultures likely used stones as spindle whorls to spin fibers into yarn. A collection of perforated pebbles discovered at an archaeological site in Israel may be spindle whorls, marking a ...
Researchers led by Dr. Alexandros Karakostis from the Institute for Archaeological Science and the Senckenberg Centre for Human Evolution and Palaeoenvironment at the University of Tübingen suggest ...