A new analysis of stone tools offers strong evidence for the theory that ancient people from the Pacific Rim traveled a ...
Stretching from western Anatolia to southeastern Europe, this previously unknown land bridge provides a whole new migration ...
The prehistoric peopling of Europe has long been documented as occurring in waves from the western edge of Eurasia.
An analysis of stone tools found in Italy and Lebanon indicates that around 42,000 years ago, modern humans in Europe and the ...
Archaeologists outside of Rome uncover ancient heavy-duty tools made from elephant bones over 400,000 years ago.
Archaeologists have uncovered a lost land bridge in Turkey, potentially reshaping the history of human migration and ...
The discovery of a stone long overlooked in a German museum suggests that Ice Age communities experimented with vivid hues far earlier than scholars believed. A stone artifact from near the end of the ...
New research along Turkey’s Ayvalık coast reveals a once-submerged land bridge that may have helped early humans cross from ...
Archaeologists in south-east Turkey have made an extraordinary find—a prehistoric stone face that might turn everything we believe about the origins of art and self-awareness on its head. In the early ...
Finding 9,000-year-old organic remains in eastern Norway is extraordinarily rare due to acidic soil conditions that typically destroy such materials quickly. The exceptional preservation at Horten has ...
Blue residue on a 13,000-year-old stone artifact, long believed to be an oil lamp, may paint a new picture of Paleolithic art ...