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Recently discovered stone tools and circular structures on the Isle of Skye suggest humans from the Old Stone Age traveled ...
These findings are reshaping our understanding of early human mobility ... suggests that the disruption caused by the arrival of late Stone Age farmers in Europe may have driven some hunter ...
Stone tools dating back 150,000 years have been found in the jungle, revealing early human occupation in dense tropical ...
As the climate got colder 24,000 years ago, Stone Age Europeans turned from hunting mammoths to hunting caribou for their fur ...
Roughly two million years old, this tool, known as the Kanjera stone, was part of a new Stone Age technology that ... enabled these largely itinerant early humans to begin establishing a sense ...
Scientists have uncovered the oldest evidence of human presence in Sicily, dating back 16,500 years, at San Teodoro cave near ...
A nearly complete skeleton found in a cave in France belonged to a group known as the Palaeolithic dogs and its skeleton ...
Similar Palaeolithic dogs have emerged at sites in Germany, Spain, and Belgium. The 14,000-year-old remains at Bonn-Oberkassel, for instance, included a partial skeleton that was buried with humans.