The prehistoric hominins “apparently were very adept at what we would consider invasive medicine,” said the anthropologist ...
Molar found in Siberia features deep hole that appears to show earliest known evidence of dental treatment ...
A battered molar from Chagyrskaya Cave in Siberia may preserve the earliest known evidence of invasive dental treatment — performed not by modern humans, but by a Neanderthal. A new study suggests ...
In a cave in Cartagena, Spain, limpet shells and snails were found, collected in the same way modern humans would have done ...
Learn how researchers recreated a 59,000-year-old Neanderthal dental procedure and uncovered evidence that ancient humans may ...
59,000 years ago in what’s now southwestern Siberia, a Neanderthal had a toothache. It must have been a doozy because they ...
Archaeologists working in Europe have found the oldest-known bone spear in Europe, dating back to the Neanderthal age between 70,000 and 80,000 years ago, according to a study published in the Journal ...
Neanderthals probably ate something most of us would find hard to swallow—meat that was left to rot, ferment, and fill up with maggots. According to a new study, this unappetizing menu choice could ...
A new addition to the Gibraltar National Museum is set to draw international attention, as a forensic reconstruction of a ...
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