The excavation of a recently discovered rock shelter site called ... with different kinds of art. The main problem with decoding the lives of the Neanderthals is the survivability of the artifacts ...
Scientists have produced a remarkable reconstruction of what a Neanderthal woman would have ... probably by a rock that had fallen from the roof of the cave at some point in the distant past.
The book debunks the supposed discoveries “proving” that Neanderthals thought like us, made art like us ... hewn-away spaces ...
Archaeological evidence shows that some Neanderthals looked after their sick and buried their dead, which suggests they were social and even compassionate beings. Prof Stringer says, 'So far, in my ...
The first era of Technological Reproducibility can be traced to evidence of the protagonism of women in rock art and ...
"Could the overall ecosystem support Neanderthal or human populations?” This region has many rock shelters as well that both groups might have lived in during this time period. Both species were known ...
If your recent ancestry lies outside of Africa, you can safely assume that you carry some Neanderthal DNA. Human origins expert Professor Chris Stringer discusses what this Neanderthal inheritance may ...
We don't know when the last Neanderthal died, but many archaeologists think some of the last lineages lived in southern Iberia. Neanderthals once roamed Eurasia, but they disappeared around the ...
Braving the cold weather in Northern Europe required Neanderthals to have robust bodies and a facility for making fire. But did they wear clothes? Indirect evidence suggests that Neanderthals ...
75,000-Year-Old Female Neanderthal from Cave Where Species Buried ... based on differences in the mechanical properties of the rock. They seem to have purposefully ... Dishing the Dirt on Human ...
Scientists found new clues about one of the last living Neanderthals. By sequencing the DNA from one of the Neanderthal's teeth, they discovered a completely new lineage. The DNA indicates recent ...
In 2015, a paleoanthropology team discovered jaw remains of a roughly 42,000-year-old Neanderthal in France. Over the next several years, the team, lead by Ludovic Slimak, found more of the ...