The bones belonged to a new species of titanosaur, a long-necked and herbivorous dinosaur considered a “gentle giant,” ...
New evidence uncovered in east Africa indicates ancient hominins began crafting tools from animal bones far earlier than ...
Brock’s iron shield fish adds to the rich prehistoric history of McGraths Flat, and contributes to its classification as a ...
Bone fragments from a cave in northern Spain suggest there were multiple hominin species living in western Europe around a ...
The oldest collection of mass-produced prehistoric bone tools reveal that human ancestors were likely capable of more advanced abstract reasoning one million years earlier than thought, finds a new ...
The bone tools date from more than a million years before our species, Homo sapiens, arose around 300,000 years ago.
Now, researchers have uncovered a substantial cache of prehistoric bone tools in the same region dating back 1.5 million years. It's the oldest collection of mass-produced bone tools yet known ...