Two baby pterosaur fossils contain rare evidence of how they died 150 million years ago — and the specimens solve a larger ...
Archaeologists and students digging in Blätterhöhle cave uncovered a 9,000-year-old fireplace (above), flint arrowheads and a bone harpoon. Photo from LWL-AfW Olpe / Michael Baales Inside a cave of ...
Smithsonian Magazine on MSN
Baby Pterosaur Fossils Reveal Mid-Flight Injury and Watery Death, Helping Solve a Paleontological Mystery
A 150-million-year-old fossil hotspot in southern Germany yields an astounding number of well-preserved juvenile pterosaurs, ...
The Daily Galaxy on MSN
Ancient Footprints In Germany Capture A Prehistoric Family Moment 300,000 Years Ago
Archaeologists working in Lower Saxony, have unearthed fossilized human footprints dating back about 300,000 years. The discovery, described in the journal Quaternary Science Reviews, represents the ...
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Archaeologists Stunned to Find Neanderthals Built 'Fat Factory' 125,000 Years Ago in Prehistoric Germany
A new study discovers an interesting fact about one of the early human civilizations. The Neanderthals were said to be running a “fat factory” around 125,000 years ago in modern-day Germany. A paper ...
More than three decades ago, a pair of hikers discovered the mummified body of a prehistoric man on an Alpine pass along the border of Italy and Austria. Archaeologists have been obsessed ever since.
Inside a cave of western Germany, archaeologists and students carefully sifted through the rocky soil. Their work uncovered several exceptional finds, including a prehistoric fireplace and weaponry.
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