Paleolithic cuisine was anything but lean and green, according to a study on the diets of our Pleistocene ancestors.
The etching, discovered at a Paleolithic campsite, may be the only known evidence hinting at how our ancestors fished over 150 centuries ago.
National Geographic Explorer Paul Salopek tells Host Carolyn Beeler about Suyanggae, South Korea, an archaeological zone with ...
Unregulated experts appointed by family courts in England and Wales have caused harm to children by separating them from ...
MeidasTouch host Brett Meiselas reports on Trump voters losing it after they either realize that Trump is a complete and ...
Over 100 small stone objects from Neolithic period are the earliest instance of 'spindle whorls,' used to spin fibers into ...
Matúš Beňo covers science for The Slovak Spectator. He occasionally writes about culture. Before joining The Slovak Spectator ...
“I see my role as a writer and journalist in large part to try and narrow that gap between the preconceptions we have, the ...
SANLIURFA, Türkiye, Nov. 12 (Xinhua) -- Chinese and Turkish experts are showing interest in collaborating on archaeological research to reveal new insights at one of the world's oldest Neolithic sites ...
In a context marked by water scarcity and collective despair, the mass offering of children sacrificed to the god of rain, ...
At the dawn of humanity, in a cave on what would become the Southern Cape coast, people who thought and looked like us mixed paint, crafted fine tools and explored graphic design.