An international team of researchers has uncovered hidden clues about life in the hills of ancient southwest Samos, Greece.
Chemical traces on 60,000-year-old stone arrowheads from South Africa suggest ancient hunters used plant poison.
The unexpected discovery of a well-preserved and fortified villa in Margam Park in South Wales sheds new light on the Roman ...
In the recent study on pain, researchers investigated three variations in the SCN9A gene, and reported greater pain ...
A meticulously researched novel challenges long-held assumptions about the Knights Templar, the bloodline of Christ, ...
Debuting February 3 at Eclipso NYC in the heart of Manhattan, Colosseum The Legendary Arena reinforces New York City as ...
A new analysis of enigmatic skulls from the Republic of Georgia suggest that Homo erectus wasn't the only human species to ...
A fascinating archaeological discovery in South Africa has revealed that humans were using sophisticated poisoned arrows 60,000 years ago, far earlier than previously documented. Chemical analysis of ...
Earliest evidence of poisoned arrows offers new insights into the advanced technology and strategic thinking of prehistoric ...
A pile of ancient arrowheads from southern Africa still holds traces of toxic plant residue, even after some 60,000 years.
Archaeologists have identified hundreds of ancient structures hidden beneath the dense canopy of Ecuador's Andean Chocó ...
They drew with crayons, possibly fed on maggots and maybe even kissed us: Forty millenniums later, our ancient human cousins ...