News

A boomerang carved from a mammoth tusk is one of the oldest in the world, and it may be even older than archaeologists ...
Set two years after the tragic events of the previous film, Ice Road: Vengeance follows Mike McCann (Liam Neeson) as he ...
With a waterfall twice the height of Niagara, the longest remote hiking trail in North America, and a population of just ...
The Earth of the last Ice Age (about 26,000 to 19,000 years ago) was very different from today’s world. In the northern hemisphere, ice sheets up to 8 kilometres tall covered much of Europe, Asia and ...
"There are many hypotheses for where life could have survived and sheltered during the Cryogenian, but we don't have excellent analogs for all of them," Husain notes. "Above-ice meltwater ponds occur ...
Knysna Eastern Heads site. Sara Watson, Author provided (no reuse) The Earth of the last Ice Age (about 26,000 to 19,000 years ago) was very different from today’s world.
Analysis - The Earth of the last Ice Age (about 26,000 to 19,000 years ago) was very different from today's world.
In 2018, Roger Summons, Schlumberger Professor of Geobiology at MIT and head of the Summons Lab in MIT’s Department of Earth, led a team to study meltwater ponds on Antarctica’s McMurdo Ice Shelf.
Even more remarkably, many of the finds date from the Last Glacial Maximum, the time 23,000-19,000 years ago when the world cooled even below preceding Ice Age conditions.
In a nutshell New independent research confirms that 23,000-year-old human footprints at White Sands National Park are authentic, proving people lived in North America during the peak ice age. The ...