Ice Age climate shifts triggered major population changes in prehistoric Europe through migration and adaptation.
Researchers studied the DNA of two 7,000-year-old naturally mummified individuals excavated in the Takarkori rock shelter in ...
Traveling East might have been an appropriate tendency for early humans living in what is now Europe near the end of the Ice ...
An archaeological study of human settlement during the Final Palaeolithic revealed that populations in Europe did not decrease homogenously during the last cold phase of the Ice Age. Significant ...
A new study sheds light on how prehistoric hunter-gatherer populations in Europe coped with climate changes over 12,000 years ...
An Indigenous-run lodge, just over a one-hour flight from Montreal, allows guests to experience the depths of the Canadian ...
The zoo said visitors will come face to face with some of the largest animals that set foot on Earth, including mammoths, ...
"I had a lot of fun doing it," says professional ice diver Ryzebol, 36, in an exclusive interview with PEOPLE about his niche ...
According to a statement released by the Austrian Academy of Sciences, archaeologists revealed further evidence of humans successfully hunting woolly mammoths 25,000 years ago within the Perschling ...
Human influence on the climate started even before the Industrial Revolution. Print Collector/Getty Images ...
According to geologists, we humans have been living in the Holocene Epoch for about 11,700 years, since the end of the last ice age. Radioisotopes like plutonium from hydrogen bomb tests conducted ...
A virtual field trip to the Topper Site, where evidence of ice age humans in SC was found! In the last decade, scientists have made startling discoveries indicating that Ice Age humans were in the ...