The study authors conclude that these Late Pleistocene hunter-gatherers were making their poison from the gifbol root bulb ...
The oldest known cremation pyre in Africa is shedding light on the complex funeral rites of ancient hunter-gatherers 9,500 years ago.
Some DNA passed down from ancient hunter-gatherers has been found to be a crucial force in living to be 100 years old.
Discover Magazine on MSN
Oldest cremation pyre found in Africa rewrites our understanding of hunter-gatherer ritual behavior
Read more about the cremation of a mysterious women 9,500 years ago, telling a more complex story of how hunter-gatherers ...
Green Matters on MSN
9,500-year-old cremation site is challenging what we know about early human burial practices
The 9,500-year-old remains were discovered to be of a woman who was between 18 and 60 years old when she died. According to ...
A team of scholars identified the oldest intentional human cremation, dramatically expanding what archaeologists know about early hunter-gatherer practices.
Live Science on MSN
9,500-year-old cremation pyre of a hunter-gatherer woman is the oldest of its kind in the world
Hunter-gatherers cremated the headless body of a woman in a pyre around 9,500 years ago in what is now Malawi.
The oft-used description of early humans as "hunter-gatherers" should be changed to "gatherer-hunters," at least in the Andes of South America, according to groundbreaking research led by a University ...
On Younger Dryas climate change as a causal determinate of prehistoric hunter-gatherer culture change / Metin I. Eren -- Climate, technology, and society during the terminal Pleistocene period in ...
Mandible of a hunter-gatherer woman who lived 7900 years ago at Matjes River Rockshelter in the Western Cape, South Africa, for whom a genome was reconstructed. In one of the largest African ...
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