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Neanderthals in two nearby caves used different techniques when butchering animal carcasses in what is now Israel, according ...
Neanderthals living just 70 kilometers apart in Israel may have had different food prep customs, according to new research on butchered animal bones. These subtle variations — like how meat was cut ...
Neanderthals in two Israeli caves used distinct meat-cutting methods, hinting at cultural food traditions passed down through ...
For Neanderthal hunters equipped with wood and stone hunting tools, the place was a veritable buffet. And you might expect ...
Yet the Scladina multitool is the first known lion bone turned into a tool. It means Neanderthals not only handled lions, but ...
A comparison of cut marks on bones reveals that Neanderthal groups living fairly close to each other had their own distinct ...
Did Neanderthals have family recipes? A new study suggests that two groups of Neanderthals living in the caves of Amud and ...
Differences in cut-marks left behind by butchery can’t be explained by different resources, tools, or skill levels, ...
Neanderthals living in two nearby caves in ancient Israel prepared their food in surprisingly different ways, according to new archaeological evidence. Despite using the same tools and hunting the ...
By comparing cut marks on bones found at northern Israel caves, researchers find early humans clung to passed-down methods ...
A new study from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem reveals that Neanderthals living in two nearby caves in northern ...
Worldwide, the oldest known artifact of this type is a bone knife that was manufactured by modern humans in Morocco around 90,000 years ago. The revelation that Neanderthals were also working with ...