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Because of this, most archeologists long believed Mediterranean islands like Malta were some of the last wildernesses to ...
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Live Science on MSNSłupcio: A 6,000-year-old amber 'gummy bear' that may have been a Stone Age amulet"Słupcio" — or "little guy from Słupsk" in Polish — is the name given to the amber bear in 2013, when a Polish kindergartner ...
New archaeological finds in Malta add to an emerging theory that early Stone Age humans cruised the open seas.
Archaeologists find evidence that hunter-gatherers crossed over 100 kilometers of open sea to reach Malta 8,500 years ago.
In a new paper published in Nature, evidence shows that hunter-gatherers were crossing at least 100 kilometers (km) of open ...
A groundbreaking study led by Bar-Ilan University reveals that starch-rich plants played a central role in the diet of ...
An analysis suggests the copper was exposed to temperatures exceeding 1,000 degrees celsius, indicating a much more advanced ...
For a long time, the planet’s small remote islands were considered the last untouched refuges of nature—isolated ecosystems ...
Seafaring hunter-gatherers were accessing remote, small islands such as Malta thousands of years before the arrival of the ...
This timeline predates the arrival of Neolithic farmers in Malta and the broader Mediterranean region, underscoring the early and prolonged presence of hunter-gatherers on these remote islands.
New research published in the journal Nature today (Wednesday 9 th April), shows that hunter-gatherers crossed at least 100km ...
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