News

A chemical signature in Neanderthal remains that suggests voracious meat eating has long puzzled researchers. Now, new ...
It has been claimed Neanderthals ate a huge amount of meat based on isotope ratios in their bones – but the explanation could ...
The Neanderthals left behind stone tools, and they almost certainly used fire, but they went extinct about 17,000 years ago, after a considerable overlap with our own species. Anthropologists ...
Neanderthals were a species of archaic human that lived between roughly 400,000 to 40,000 years ago. Their range included Europe, southwestern Asia, and central Asia.
The Neanderthal occupants of a cave in central Spain had a pretty unusual tradition that seems to have been passed down through multiple generations and may have persisted for thousands of years.
Once thought primitive, we now know Neanderthals were intelligent and even interbred with modern humans—many people today carry some Neanderthal DNA. Turns out, a lot of our jokes against our ...
Later, Neanderthal artisans broke the bone and reused it for crafting flint tools—a process known as retouching. While the multitool’s additional uses remain unknown, the team argues it offers ...
In 2015, a paleoanthropology team discovered jaw remains of a roughly 42,000-year-old Neanderthal in France. Over the next several years, the team, lead by Ludovic Slimak, found more of the ...
A famous prehistoric cave site in Belgium has yielded the oldest multifunctional tool of its kind. This Ice Age “Swiss Army knife” wasn’t crafted by early Homo sapiens, however.Instead, the ...