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Ancient humans may have walked from Turkey to Europe over now-submerged land
The theory was that Anatolia, the region in which Ayvalık is situated, and Europe were linked during the last Ice Age, offering early humans a path to cross over via southward island-hopping routes.
PARIS – Archaeologists say two students have found a human tooth from about 560,000 years ago in a famous prehistoric cave in southwestern France, the oldest human body part ever discovered in the ...
A DNA analysis conducted on soil samples found within a Turkish cave system has revealed evidence of an ancient charcoal ...
Continuous landmasses, now submerged, may have made it possible for early humans to cross between present-day Turkey and ...
This report is concerned with the analysis of land boundaries and the social adaptation of community groups in prehistoric times in leeward Hawaii Island. Our aim is to present methods which enable ...
Society for American Archaeology Annual Meeting (52nd : 1987 : Toronto, Ont.) Notes Edited papers from a symposium held during the 52nd annual meeting of the Society for American Archaeology, May 9, ...
Prehistoric statuettes like the Venus of Willendorf have been found all over Europe, but their original purpose remains ...
Archaeologists have undertaken pioneering scans of the highest prehistoric paintings of animals in Europe. Archaeologists at the University of York have undertaken pioneering scans of the highest ...
New research led by universities in the UK has uncovered evidence linking prehistoric cave paintings in California and a poisonous flower known for its hallucinogenic properties. According to ...
Yagul Archaeological Zone in Oaxaca State, Mexico. Prehistoric caves of Yagul and Mitla in the Central Valley of Oaxaca lie ...
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