Pyrite found at a 400,000-year-old site in Barnham, England suggests that early humans were making fire long before experts ...
New research led by the British Museum has found evidence of the world’s oldest human fire-making activity in Barnham, ...
At the Paleolithic site of Medzhibozh in Ukraine, archaeologists identified ivory fragments shaped into tools nearly 400,000 ...
Archaeologists in Britain say they've found the earliest evidence of humans making fires anywhere in the world. The discovery ...
A remarkably intact pottery vessel dating back more than 10,000 years has been recovered from the depths of Lake Biwa, Japan, marking one of the oldest and most significant ceramic discoveries in ...
The study, published in the journal Nature, is based on a years-long examination of a reddish patch of sediment excavated at ...
A team of researchers led by the British Museum has unearthed the oldest known evidence of fire-making, dating back more than ...
In 2023, archaeologists announced the discovery of arrowheads in a grotto in southern France dated to 54,000 years ago, and ...
Scientists were amazed to discover a 507-year-old clam that was already 100 in Shakespeare’s day, but why did it live so long ...
Archaeologists found 115,000-year-old human footprints where they shouldn't be—and they just might rewrite the history of human migration.
The last two decades have seen a revolution in scientists' ability to reconstruct the past. This has been made possible ...