Alaskan infant’s DNA tells story of ‘first Americans’0
- Ancient Archeology, From Around the Web
- January 5, 2018
The 11,500-year-old remains of an infant girl from Alaska have shed new light on the peopling of the Americas.
The 11,500-year-old remains of an infant girl from Alaska have shed new light on the peopling of the Americas.
The eggs were found by workers who were excavating the ground for the construction of a school in Jiangxi province.
Ancient toolmaking school has everyone thinking that our species has been talking, teaching and making tech for a really long time.
A BAFFLING discovery inside Egypt’s Great Pyramid was among the scientific discoveries and unsolved mysteries that left us scratching our heads this year.
Did ancient priests fool visitors to a sulfurous subterranean stream that they had crossed the River Styx and entered Hades?
Move over Indiana Jones; it’s all about robots here in 2017!
Maybe the ‘Boring Billion’ wasn’t so boring, after all
Stones like emeralds, sapphires and rubies are more than just financially valuable or aesthetically valued. Each one is a glittering clue to the extreme physical, chemical and tectonic forces at work deep underground
Using x-ray lasers, researchers at Stockholm University have been able to map out how water fluctuates between two different states when it is cooled. At -44°C these fluctuations reach a maximum pointing to the fact that water can exist as two different distinct liquids. The findings will be published in the journal Science.