Our closest cousins, the Neanderthals, excelled at making stone tools and hunting animals, and survived the rigors of multiple ice ages. So why did they disappear 27,000 years ago? While ...
One such discovery was a cave chamber full of ancient hearths and stone tools dating to the time of Neanderthals, uncovered in 2021 by Clive Finlayson, an evolutionary biologist and director of ...
along with some stone tools made in a way that was not associated with Neanderthals. The evidence suggests that this early group of humans lived at the site for a relatively brief period ...
While birch tar may have been used by Neanderthals to attach stone tools to wooden handles in some cases, this particular tool probably had a grip made only of tar. Dr Niekus said there was no ...
Our prehistoric cousins used glue to make stone tools 40,000 years ago, a new study suggests. New analysis of Neanderthal tools has revealed the tools were held together by a multi-component ...
Rather than, as originally argued, functioning as a game drive site for hunting mammoths, we see La Cotte as offering an important vantage point for Neanderthal hunters exploiting these dissected ...
This 230,000 year old stone tool was made by an early Neanderthal.This handaxe is one of a thousand stone tools found with early Neanderthal remains in excavations at Pontnewydd Cave, Denbighshire.
Feb. 21, 2024 — Neanderthals created stone tools held together by a multi-component adhesive, a team of scientists has discovered. Its findings, which are the earliest evidence of a complex ...