Crusaders made love and war, genetic study finds
First genetic study of the Crusaders confirms that warriors mixed and had families with local people in the near East, and died together in battle.
Neolithic site reveals transition from hunting and gathering to animal herding
Archaeologists examine urine salt levels in the soil to reconstruct the evolution of sheep and goat domestication at 10,000-year-old Turkish settlement.
Need for social skills helped shape modern human face
The modern human face is distinctively different to that of our near relatives and now researchers believe its evolution may have been partly driven by our need for good...
Archaeologists discover lost medieval city in Africa
Scholars on the ground have discovered what they believe to be the remains of a long lost medieval city in Ethiopia.
Woolly mammoths and Neanderthals may have shared genetic traits
Findings point to molecular resemblance in climate adaptation traits of the two species, Tel Aviv University researchers say.
Human history through tree rings: Trees in Amazonia reveal pre-colonial human disturbance
New study shows that tropical trees act as a living record of past human activity in the Amazon.
UC researchers find ancient Maya farms in Mexican wetlands
University of Cincinnati archaeologists say these farms likely produced cotton and other goods to support Yucatan trade routes.