Canadian rocks found to contain oldest known evidence of life on Earth0
- Ancient Archeology, From Around the Web
- October 3, 2017
Ancient sedimentary rocks in Labrador have been found to contain the oldest-known evidence of life on Earth.
Ancient sedimentary rocks in Labrador have been found to contain the oldest-known evidence of life on Earth.
Scientists have discovered traces of life more than half-a-billion years old that could change the way we think about how all animals evolved on earth.
The largest marsupial to ever walk the Earth just got another accolade: It’s also the only marsupial known to migrate seasonally.
This undated photo provided by Raffaello Pellizzon in December 2016 shows fossilized footprints of a human ancestor, believed to be Australopithecus afarensis, at the Laetoli site in northern Tanzania. Findings were described in a report released Wednesday, Dec. 14, 2016, by the journal eLife.
Ruins of the ancient Roman city of Neapolis have been discovered off the northeast coast of Tunisia, according to an AFP report.
Foot for thought.
Researchers say finding suggests small tribe lived in isolation in modern-day Canada for thousand of years
Who built China’s Sunken City, was it extraterrestrials?
Archaeologists believe they have solved one of history’s most puzzling questions – how the ancient Egyptians transported over 170,000 tons of limestone to build the Great Pyramid at Giza.
Stonehenge, the prehistoric monument in Wiltshire, England is famous throughout the world and it remains today a place of extreme reverence.