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Discover Magazine on MSNPrehistoric Human Populations Shifted East at the End of the Ice AgeTraveling East might have been an appropriate tendency for early humans living in what is now Europe near the end of the Ice ...
A new study sheds light on how prehistoric hunter-gatherer populations in Europe coped with climate changes over 12,000 years ...
The mineralized bones are the earliest human fossil remains found so far in Western Europe. However, it wasn’t immediately obvious which species of prehistoric human the team had found ...
Researchers in Spain have unearthed a fossil from a potential new prehistoric member of the human family tree, and they say it's the earliest known remnants of a face discovered in Western Europe.
Scientists reconstructed the face of a prehistoric human using a 16,000-year-old skull in southern China offering clues about ...
An archaeological study of human settlement during the Final Palaeolithic revealed that populations in Europe did not decrease homogenously during the last cold phase of the Ice Age. Significant ...
Although demographic dynamics, particularly in these early phases of human prehistory, are still poorly understood, the new study adds to a growing body of evidence on how prehistoric humans ...
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