Results 191 to 200 of about 10,371 (312)
Our current understanding of the origins of Homo sapiens is limited, in part, by the fragmented fossil record from Late Pleistocene and early Holocene Africa. Here, we re‐examine the Kabua 1 cranium, an enigmatic and little‐studied Kenyan fossil discovered in the 1950s. We compare virtual reconstructions created previously by our team with a wide range
Abel Marinus Bosman +7 more
wiley +1 more source
Fishing for millennia: Effects and impacts of prehistoric fishing in the Syltholm Fjord, Denmark. [PDF]
Groß D +3 more
europepmc +1 more source
The Eastern Mediterranean lies directly on the principal migration route for human groups dispersing across Africa, Europe, and Asia. It also encompasses the Balkans, where fauna and flora, as well as hominin populations, are thought to have persisted through glacial periods.
Katerina Harvati
wiley +1 more source
Archaeomagnetic evidence indicates post-Inka reheating of metallurgical kilns at Quillay (NW Argentina). [PDF]
Del Río J +7 more
europepmc +1 more source
Based on ethnographic research at Rūm Orthodox Christian monasteries in Lebanon, the article studies scenes of Islam at the monastery as they intersect with anxious public debates on, and anthropological theorizations of, sectarianism and ‘Muslim–Christian’ relations in the Mashriq.
Aaron F. Eldridge
wiley +1 more source
Death by theory. A tale of mystery and archaeological theory
Riccardo Frigoli
doaj +1 more source
Dentistry and dental care in antiquity: part 1 - prehistory, Mesopotamia, Israel, Etruria and the Far East. [PDF]
Forshaw R.
europepmc +1 more source
This article presents a synthesis of recent developments in the study of human evolution over the past five years. It begins with an overview of hominin species nomenclature and diversity, followed by an examination of the proposed population bottleneck ∼900,000 years ago.
James Cole +3 more
wiley +1 more source
The archaeology of climate change: a blueprint for integrating environmental and cultural systems. [PDF]
Burke A +8 more
europepmc +1 more source
The year 2025 marked the ninetieth since a fossil hominin occipital bone was discovered in Swanscombe, southeast England. In subsequent years, its parietal bones were found, producing what remains the oldest partial cranium from Britain today. In the earliest analyses, it was interpreted as a descendant of the infamous fraudulent fossil Piltdown Man ...
Emma E. Bird, Chris Stringer
wiley +1 more source

