First modern human stone tool culture lasted 20,000 years longer than thought
Some 11 thousand years ago, Africa's furthest west harbored the last populations to preserve tool-making traditions first established by the earliest members of our species.
Oldest hominins of Olduvai Gorge persisted across changing environments
~2.0 to 1.8 million year-old archaeological site demonstrates that early humans had the skills and tools to cope with ecological change.
Evidence for a massive paleo-tsunami at ancient Tel Dor, Israel
Paleo-tsunami may be the reason previous archaeological surveys found no evidence for low-lying coastal villages in the area over a 4000 year period.
Ancient DNA sheds light on the peopling of the Mariana Islands
Researchers find that present-day Mariana Islanders' ancestry is linked to the Philippines.
The aroma of distant worlds
Researchers report evidence of exotic foods in the Near East of the 2nd millennium BCE, suggesting trade networks with South Asia.
Researchers deconstruct ancient Jewish parchment using multiple imaging techniques
Analyses of the materials in the scrolls helps put the object into an historical context and guides conservators in future restoration efforts.
Mummified baboons shine new light on the lost land of Punt
Stable isotopes confirm long-distance seafaring during the 2nd Millennium B.C.
Palaeolithic sea voyages to Japanese islands was choice, not chance
Palaeolithic people likely colonized the Ryukyu Islands intentionally.
African trade routes sketched out by medieval beads
An analysis of archaeological glass beads discovered in sub-Saharan West Africa brings to light the full extent of the region's international trade routes between the 7th and 13th centuries.