Splash Travels on MSN
Archaeological evidence suggests that if Neanderthals were alive, they could outfight, outlift, and outlive everyone today.
Life demanded attention to every detail—tracking, hunting, crafting, and planning. These folks adapted naturally, relying on ...
History With Kayleigh Official on MSN
82,000-Year-Old Neanderthal Family Footprints Found in Portugal
In Portugal’s Algarve region, archaeologists uncovered Neanderthal trackways left by adults, children, and even a toddler 82,000 years ago. Using luminescence dating, researchers linked the footprints ...
Ancient remains from a cave in Serbia show that Neanderthals were hunting mountain goats 300,000 years ago, adding to evidence of their ability to adapt to different environments ...
Two new hominin track sites discovered on Portugal beaches change how we view Neanderthals’ relationship with coastlines.
A new study suggests that fragments unearthed at an archaeological site in Uzbekistan look like other examples of arrowheads ...
A study involving the University of Seville reveals the first Neanderthal footprints of adults, children and birds in southern Portugal, a discovery ...
Discover Magazine on MSN
This Ancient Shell Workshop Appeared in France When Modern Humans First Arrived, Around 42,000 Years Ago
Learn more about a jewelry-making site from the Châtelperronian culture, a tradition tied to the Neanderthal-to-modern human ...
Neanderthals became known as carnivores because of their hunting, but scientists now say this is inaccurate - Science History/Alamy Neanderthals loved eating maggots and were not the total carnivores ...
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