Morning Overview on MSN
DNA suggests modern humans and Neanderthals shared one culture for over 20,000 years
Two separate cave sites in the Levant now show that Neanderthals and modern humans used the same stone tools, hunted the same ...
Morning Overview on MSN
A cave in Turkey shows Neanderthals and modern humans using the very same tools
For most of the twentieth century, the arrival of modern humans in a region was treated as something close to a replacement event for the Neanderthals who lived there before them, two populations with ...
Live Science on MSN
Neanderthals and modern humans may have shared culture 59,000 years ago in Turkey, study finds
Fossils, stone tools and seashells in Turkey show that Neanderthals and the Homo sapiens who moved in later had the same ...
We know from the traces left behind in our DNA that Homo sapiens met and mingled with Neanderthals long before our species ...
KYOTO, JAPAN—Modern humans and Neanderthals may have shared a common culture over a period of some 20,000 years, Live Science reports. An international team of researchers excavated Üçağizlı II Cave ...
Discoveries at a Üçağızlı II cave in southern Turkey suggest that Neanderthals and Homo sapiens made similar tools, hunted ...
BUFFALO, N.Y. — In recent years, scientists have uncovered evidence that modern humans and Neanderthals share a tangled past. In the course of human history, these two species of hominins interbred ...
This is an extract from Our Human Story, our newsletter about the revolution in archaeology. Sign up to receive it in your inbox every month. Among the many other human species that once inhabited ...
Neanderthal populations in southern Europe collected shellfish throughout the year, with a marked preference for the colder months, according to a new international study led by researchers from the ...
Cavemen gathered shellfish to eat using the same methods as modern humans, according to new research. Neanderthals in southern Europe collected mollusks throughout the year — with a marked preference ...
A late Neanderthal group in Belgium and France stayed genetically healthy, with no inbreeding signs, just before vanishing.
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