Fossil hunters find evidence of 555m-year-old human relative0
- Ancient Archeology, From Around the Web
- March 25, 2020
Ikaria wariootia is half the size of a grain of rice and an early example of a bilateral organism
Ikaria wariootia is half the size of a grain of rice and an early example of a bilateral organism
New evidence gleaned from Antarctic seashells confirms that Earth was already unstable before the asteroid impact that wiped out the dinosaurs.
Two infants were buried some 2,100 years ago wearing “helmets” made from the skulls of other children, archaeologists have discovered.
It might just look like the imprint of a bat squashed into a rock, kind of like the imprint an unfortunate bird leaves when it collides with a window. But paleontologist Duncan McIlroy says this unassuming item is an amazing find.
A fossilized pelvis found in Hungary suggests human ancestors were able to stand upright much earlier than anthropologists had realized.
Rediscovery of missing finger bone shows slender fingertips unlike knobbed Neanderthal finger bones
In an evening lecture titled ‘Humans and Monkeys in Java 12,000 Years Ago’ hosted by the French Institute of Indonesia (IFI), Ingicco details an interesting finding from the Song Terus cave in Pacitan regency, East Java.
An international team of paleontologists has discovered 1,000- to 900-million-year-old microfossils of a fungus in estuarine shale of the Grassy Bay Formation in Arctic Canada. These multicellular organic-walled microfossils are more than half a billion years older than previously reported occurrences of fungi.
Frogs trapped in amber for 99 million years are giving a glimpse of a lost world.
Predatory creatures were distant ancestors of modern mammals