Either as hunters or the hunted, prehistoric humans interacted with saber-toothed cats 300,000 years ago.
Pre-contact Amazonian natives had little impact on land, new research finds
Florida Tech-led study refutes earlier theory that Amazonians before European contact created the current rainforest landscape.
Research backs human role in extinction of mammoths, other mammals
Radiocarbon analysis of fossils of extinct Ice Age mammals shows possible timing and pattern of human hunter arrival and dispersal in the Americas.
DNA from ancient baby remains in Alaska supports Bering land bridge layover
Genetic study links many Native Americans to 11,500-year-old infant remains in Alaskan grave.
The Sphinx that came to Philadelphia
The story of a colossal Egyptian sphinx's journey to America.
The environment of the Cantabrian Region in the course of 35,000 years is reconstructed
Research on the region in Spain informs our understanding of the backdrop for prehistoric human groups during the Pleistocene.
Shift in weaning age supports hunting-induced extinction of Siberian woolly mammoths
Amidst the debate about what brought on the extinction of the mammoths, new study results point to human hunting as the cause.
Our ancestors probably didn’t get 8 hours a night, either
UCLA-led study on present-day hunter-gatherers dispels myths about how humans evolved in sleeping.
Archaeologists memorialize the historic chancel burials at Jamestown
Famous early founders of Jamestown remembered with new reconstruction at the original church site where Pocahontas was married.
Mysterious Ancient Maya Mural Keeps Its Secrets
Revealing the full mural will have to wait, but overlying plaster shows ancient graffiti inscribed on its surface.
Ancient genome from Africa sequenced for the first time
Ancient DNA from 4,500-year-old skull shows wave of population back-migration into Africa from Western Eurasia much more extensive than previously thought. Strong 7,000-year-old Neolithic farmer ancestry detected.
Human Ancestor Candidate Sported Hands and Feet Much Like Modern Humans
The newly discovered Homo naledi species walked much like us and had hands that could manipulate objects similar to that of modern human hands, say researchers.
Petroglyph in Spain Marks when Atlantic and Mediterranean Cultures Met
Bronze Age rock carving depicts a Mediterranean style boat.
Mummification was commonplace in Bronze Age Britain
Bronze Age burial remains in U.K. show signs of preservation consistent with mummification.
Possible site of ancient Sodom yields more finds
Archaeologists continue to uncover evidence of a massive Bronze Age city-state in present-day Jordan.
Fossilized ear bones reveal human ancestors heard higher frequencies
Study results have implications for the evolution of human language.