Ancient tools found in North Africa could ‘rewrite human origin story’0
- Ancient Archeology, From Around the Web
- February 7, 2019
The story of humankind may need some editing.
The story of humankind may need some editing.
The fragments could potentially be part of the version of the Vulgate Cycle that Sir Thomas Malory used as a source for Le Morte D’Arthur
The heavy bombardment of terrestrial planets by asteroids from space has contributed to the formation of the early evolved crust on Earth that later gave rise to continents — home to human civilisation.
This presentation shows we do not know the whole truth about human origins.
One world, two species and Tartarian DNA all point towards the real reasons behind why mainstream archaeology seems to ignore worldwide evidence of ancient artifacts and masonry they cannot and will not explain.
Prof Clive Finlayson, director of the Gibraltar Museum, explains why some old assumptions about the intellectual capabilities of our evolutionary relatives, the Neanderthals persist today. But a body of evidence is increasingly forcing us to re-visit these old ideas.
Geneticists have begun using old bones to make sweeping claims about the distant past. But their revisions to the human story are making some scholars of prehistory uneasy.
AI has predicted a new hybrid species stemming from Denisovans and Neanderthals that has not yet been identified.
In 30 years’ time, the treaty that maintains harmony in Antarctica will be up for review – could archaeological discoveries there influence the continent’s future?
Mud from Lake Mercer revealed crushed critters that resembled spiders and worms