Morning Overview on MSN
400,000-year-old find rewrites when humans mastered fire
A patch of scorched earth in eastern England is forcing scientists to rethink one of the most important turning points in ...
History With Kayleigh Official on MSN
China’s 40,000-year-old Stone Age culture scientists missed
A newly identified Paleolithic culture in northern China reveals unique stone tools and early ochre processing dating back ...
In a groundbreaking archaeological discovery, researchers have unearthed a 476,000-year-old wooden structure at Kalambo Falls in Zambia, revealing that early ...
In a groundbreaking archaeological discovery, researchers have unearthed a 476,000-year-old wooden structure at Kalambo Falls in northern Zambia, offering a ...
A remarkable discovery of 476,000-year-old wooden logs at Kalambo Falls reveals that early humans were reshaping their ...
Relations between dogs and people are so normal and pervasive as to pass almost unregarded. Yet viewed objectively, this ...
That could place the ancestors of Homo sapiens—modern humans—outside Africa, an idea which flips everything palaeontologists ...
The final confrontation in “Fire and Ash,” aside from the addition of the Mangkwan, is a dead ringer for “Way of Water” — ...
National Geographic Explorer Paul Salopek is retracing the path of human migration. More specifically, the scientific ...
According to groundbreaking findings from England, Neanderthals were sparking their own fires 400,000 years ago — hundreds of thousands of years earlier than many anthropologists previously believed.
Archaeologists in Britain say they've found the earliest evidence of humans making fires anywhere in the world. The discovery ...
Archaeologists have found the earliest evidence yet of fire technology — and it was created by Neanderthals in England more ...
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