A "completely unique" collection of prehistoric stone artifacts have been linked to a "devastating" volcanic eruption.
Hundreds of stone artifacts discovered on a Danish island may have been offered to the gods to ward off a climate crisis.
Members of a Stone Age culture in Denmark may have ritually buried stones to counter the effects of a volcanic eruption.
An international team of geneticists, led by those from Trinity College Dublin, has joined forces with archaeologists from Bournemouth University to decipher the structure of British Iron Age society, ...
“Our research shows that the material properties of the stones – such as suitability, quality, and durability – were likely ...
Analysis of basalt tools from the Hula Valley shows that Stone Age humans gathered, extracted and crushed starches from ...
The Natufian culture, a bridge between the Paleolithic and Neolithic, marks early settlement, farming, and symbolic art in the Levant.
The remains of the ancient 18-month-old male child, who was the subject of the study, was accidentally unearthed near Wilsall ...
Beyond flint-knapping and tossing spears with atlatls, Kent State University’s Metin Eren has a vision for his field’s future ...
The course provides a general understanding of Stone Age technologies, concentrating but not exclusively ... artefacts in relation to the social and evolutionary contexts of hunters and gatherers. The ...
At a Neolithic settlement on the Danish island Funen dating back 5,500 years, archaeologists unearthed 14 Neolithic grinding ...
Previous research held that the region’s architecture made a simple progression from round to rectangular structures during the early Stone Age ... culture of mainly hunters from Palestine ...