Archaeology
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ArchaeologyMummies existed before Egypt’s pyramids
Materials from an ancient Egyptian cemetery suggest people were preserving their dead long before the pyramids and pharaohs.
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ArchaeologyNeandertal ancestor?
Fossils found in a Spanish cave have features that are a combination of Neandertals and other species. The mix suggests Neandertal roots go back even farther than scientists had suspected.
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ArchaeologyAncient footprints surface in Britain
There are hints they could have been made by ancestors of Neandertals.
By Bruce Bower -
ArchaeologyAmerican cannibals
Skeletal remains of a Jamestown teen show signs of cannibalism in colonial America, new data show. The girl’s skull provides the first concrete support for historical accounts that some starving colonists had resorted to eating the flesh of others.
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ArchaeologyThe return of a king
The 15th century’s Richard III has returned — or at least, his bones have.
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ArchaeologyHobbits: Our tiny cousins
Skeletal remains of ancient human relatives found in Indonesia are challenging some long-accepted “truths” about human evolution.
By Karl Gruber -
ArchaeologyMeet your mysterious relative
Ardi climbed trees and walked on two legs 4.4 million years ago.
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ArchaeologySahara cemetery
Archaeologists uncover the remains of a Stone Age settlement in the Sahara desert.
By Emily Sohn -
ArchaeologyGlassworks in ancient Egypt
Ancient Egyptians were producing and exporting glass more than 3,000 years ago.
By Emily Sohn -
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ArchaeologyDecoding a beverage jar
Ancient pottery provides hints of the world's oldest known wine.
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ArchaeologySymbols from the Stone Age
Rocks found in a cave suggest the people used objects and colors to stand for other things more than 90,000 years ago.
By Emily Sohn