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Archaeology Aug 12, 2025

Elongated skull from Italian cave reveals earliest European evidence of cranial modification

A University of Florence–led team reports early Eurasian evidence of artificial cranial modification (ACM) in a Late Upper Paleolithic individual from Arene Candide Cave, Italy. Shape analyses place the specimen within ...

Paleontology & Fossils Aug 11, 2025

Âé¶¹ÒùÔºicist describes discovering preserved blood vessels in the world's largest T. rex

Despite the fact that much of the current research in paleontology focuses on trying to find traces of organic remains in fossils, dinosaur DNA has unfortunately never been recovered.

Ecology Aug 11, 2025

Moose have lived in Colorado for centuries: Unpacking evidence from history, archaeology and oral traditions

Moose are on the loose in the southern Rockies.

Archaeology Aug 11, 2025

Stable isotope analysis shows shifting subsistence in ancient Andean civilization of Vichama

Dr. Luis Pezo-Lanfranco and his colleagues conducted stable isotope analysis to reconstruct the diets of 38 human individuals from the early Central Andean civilization of Vichama (1800 BCE–1300 CE).

Archaeology Aug 11, 2025

Remains of British researcher lost in 1959 recovered from Antarctic glacier

The remains of an Antarctic researcher have been discovered by a Polish team among rocks exposed by a receding glacier in Antarctica. They are identified by DNA as those of Dennis "Tink" Bell, a 25-year-old meteorologist ...

Paleontology & Fossils Aug 11, 2025

South African caves filled with fossil clues to Pleistocene Epoch

Fossils are the backbone—oftentimes literally—of researching the far past. And because most of human evolution took place throughout Africa, the fossils the continent holds are vital to piecing together early human history. ...

Archaeology Aug 11, 2025

Livestock played a role in prehistoric plague infections, genomic study finds

Around 5,000 years ago, a mysterious form of plague spread throughout Eurasia, only to disappear 2,000 years later. Known only from ancient DNA, this enigmatic "LNBA plague" lineage has left scientists puzzled about its likely ...

Archaeology Aug 11, 2025

Eating the competition? New evidence suggests Neolithic farmers cannibalized enemies

Slicing, chopping and bite and cut marks on human remains from 5,700 years ago suggest that cannibalism may have been a common practice among our Neolithic ancestors.

Ecology Aug 10, 2025

Our DNA analysis of 75,000-year-old bones in Arctic caves reveals how animals responded to changing climates

As the Arctic warms faster than anywhere else on Earth, animals that have evolved to survive the cold face unprecedented challenges. While scientists are learning more about how modern wildlife responds to environmental change, ...

Paleontology & Fossils Aug 7, 2025

Hop back in time to find a new Aussie relative of New Guinea's forest wallaby

Around the world, kangaroos and wallabies are well-recognized symbols of Australia, but a new discovery highlights the deeply linked environmental identities of Australia and New Guinea.

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