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Archaeologists use water screening to find tiny artifacts like bone needles. - Danny Walker Reconstructions and Micro-CT scans reveal differences among the bones of various animal specimens.
Archaeologists have discovered a set of ivory tools which scientists believe dates back nearly 400,000 years, about 280,000 ...
A joint team of archaeologists, chronologists, geologists, and paleontologists have successfully dated a hoard of wooden ...
Archaeologists have unearthed new ancient iron artifacts that utilize iron from meteorites, at a time when early humans were not thought to be able to smelt iron ore.
Archaeologists working in the desert badlands of Kenya have uncovered dozens of stone tools crafted 3.3 million years ago, the earliest evidence of technology on Earth.
Archaeologists Found 1.5-Million-Year-Old Bone Tools That Show Early Humans Were Unexpected Geniuses Where they were getting elephant and hippo bones is another story.
Archaeologists Found 11,500-Year-Old Tools That Reveal an Incredible Human Adventure They took a one-way ticket through Doggerland.
Archaeologists have discovered some of the first-ever tools used on Earth at a site dubbed 'the cradle of humankind.' They found 3mn-year-old knives made from stones.
The unfinished tools were found on the traditional territory of the Santiam Band of the Kalapuya, which stretches between present-day Portland and Roseburg.
Zahi Hawass said that archaeologists found brick houses, artifacts, and tools from pharaonic times at the site of the 3,000-year-old lost city.
The state archaeologist is casting doubt on claims that an archaeological dig in the northern Minnesota city of Walker has turned up ancient stone tools between 13,000 and 14,000 years old.
The discovery of Stone Age needles made from the bones of foxes, cats and other small carnivores reveal how prehistoric humans survived in cold climes.