Maternal DNA from Neanderthal teeth found in Stajnia Cave show Neanderthals moved across wide areas of Europe.
A new genetic analysis of Neanderthal remains from Stajnia Cave offers an unusually detailed glimpse into a small group that ...
The teeth, which belonged to a group of at least seven individuals, have been dated to between 120,000 and 92,000 years ago, ...
If you look at a Neanderthal skull and a Homo sapiens skull, they’re visibly different: Neanderthal skulls are lower and longer, whereas ours tend to be rounder. However, those differences probably ...
The Neanderthal occupants of a cave in central Spain had a pretty unusual tradition that seems to have been passed down through multiple generations and may have persisted for thousands of years.
A skull fragment discovered over fifty years ago on the banks of the Elbe River in Germany has finally yielded its secrets. Long considered by some researchers to be a rare Neanderthal-modern human ...
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Ancient remains from Israel’s North show Neanderthal children grew faster than modern humans
According to the study, Amud 7’s remains date to approximately 51,000 and 56,000 years ago and belong to the most complete ...
The latest research on a Neanderthal infant from Amud Cave in Israel is giving a clearer picture of how different early ...
The Altamura Man was discovered in a cave in southern Italy in 1993. K.A.R.S.T. PRIN Project Neanderthals had a distinctive appearance. Before they died out roughly 40,000 years ago, Homo sapiens’ ...
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