Archaeologists outside of Rome uncover ancient heavy-duty tools made from elephant bones over 400,000 years ago.
Experts have cautioned against a direct comparison with the previous count, as the latest exercise employed a significantly ...
At Rome’s Casal Lumbroso site, humans 400,000 years ago turned a dead elephant into food and tools—proof of astonishing ...
Indore: Moti, the famous elephant at the Indore zoo (Kamla Nehru Prani Sangrahalaya), was recommended by a high-power ...
During warmer periods of the Middle Pleistocene, ancient humans in Italy were in the habit of butchering elephants for meat ...
1don MSN
How a 400,000-year-old elephant skeleton solved a tantalizing puzzle of early human behavior
One spring, after a long winter, an aged elephant lay dying at the bank of a small stream near the coast of what is now ...
A TiKTok video of an elephant charging at tourists and catching the boat. Online users were touched by the clip of the elephant protecting their young.
Mongabay News on MSN
Migrating elephants get room to roam via community conservation efforts
The regularly used airstrip outside the town of Archers Post, in northern Kenya, was closed after being damaged in heavy ...
Discover Magazine on MSN
Unknown Early Hominins Ate Elephants and Then Used Their Bones to Make Tools
Learn more about the archaeological discovery of an ancient elephant carcass surrounded by hundreds of butchery tools.
The elephant sculptures that could be seen around Leicester city centre for nearly 10 weeks have been auctioned off for ...
The trick to calming an unhappy elephant? Sing him Frank Sinatra songs, according to one of the vets tasked with assessing whether Kaavan can be moved from poor conditions in a zoo in Pakistan's ...
Stanford football needs a new head coach after the 2025 season, and recently fired James Franklin has shown that he can excel ...
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