Humans have been creating artistic images of their environment for tens of thousands of years, but weirdly missing from all their cave art and carvings is a pretty obvious omission - the human face.
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Interesting Engineering on MSNPhilippines’ 40,000-year-old deep-sea fishing tech contests West’s marine powerNew discoveries in Southeast Asia suggest that early humans mastered the art of seafaring and deep-sea fishing 40,000 years ...
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Inquirer on MSNStudy says ancient Filipinos had seafaring before Europe, AfricaA study from the Ateneo de Manila University reveals that ancient Filipinos mastered deep-sea fishing and seafaring 40,000 ...
Ancient seafarers in the Philippines and ISEA built sophisticated boats and mastered deep-sea fishing 40,000 years ago, ...
Popular Mechanics on MSN14d
Scientists Extracted DNA From the Dirt to Learn More About the 19,000-Year-Old ‘Red Lady’However, the most fascinating discovery is that the team also found human DNA belonging to the ‘Fournol’ genetic ancestry, a ...
Given the vast majority of organic boating materials quickly decompose, experts couldn’t be sure whether these Paleolithic ...
Skulls from Paleolithic Europe’s Pavlovian people have long been noted for their damaged teeth, with wear patterns evident along their outer surfaces. A new study posits a theory that this ...
BEIJING: Several of China's breakthrough discoveries in archaeology last year shared the spotlight on Wednesday (Feb 19) at a ...
Stone tool analysis of sites in Southeast Asia provided evidence that the area was a technological leader in seafaring.
April Nowell, a Paleolithic archaeologist at the University of Victoria in Canada who was not involved in the study, told Live Science in an email that, "as someone who studies Ice Age adolescents ...
Construction work on the French Riviera has uncovered the remains of man's earliest-known construction work: huts put up by hunters who visited the shore of the Mediterranean some 300,000 years ago ...
In a study published January 23 in the Journal of Paleolithic Archaeology, the biological anthropologist argues that labrets could have caused the unusual dental wear previously noted in many ...
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