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General Science / Archaeology & Fossils news 1234

Antarctic fossils paint a picture of a much warmer continent

August 04, 2008 | User rating: 4.7 / 5 after 17 vote(s) | No comments yet

National Science Foundation-funded scientists working in an ice-free region of Antarctica have discovered the last traces of tundra--in the form of fossilized plants and insects--on the interior of the southernmost ...


Little teeth suggest big jump in primate timeline

August 04, 2008 | User rating: not shown ( 4 vote(s) ) | No comments yet

Tiny fossilized teeth excavated from an Indian open-pit coal mine could be the oldest Asian remains ever found of anthropoids, the primate lineage of today's monkeys, apes and humans, say researchers from Duke University ...


Construction workers unearth mammoth bones in Minsk

July 25, 2008 | User rating: 3.8 / 5 after 5 vote(s) | No comments yet

Workers building a business centre in Minsk came across the bones of two mammoths thought to be between 25,000 and 45,000 years old, an official from Belarus' Academy of Sciences told AFP on Friday.


New life given to ancient Egyptian texts stored at Stanford for decades

July 23, 2008 | User rating: 4.3 / 5 after 9 vote(s) | No comments yet

They're torn and faded and have the woven texture of a flattened Triscuit. At first glance, the ancient Egyptian texts look like scraps of garbage. And more than 2,000 years ago, that's exactly what they were—discarded ...


Unique fossil discovery shows Antarctic was once much warmer

July 23, 2008 | User rating: 4.4 / 5 after 24 vote(s) | User comments: 13

A new fossil discovery- the first of its kind from the whole of the Antarctic continent- provides scientists with new evidence to support the theory that the polar region was once much warmer.


Dino diversity had a long pedigree, says study

July 23, 2008 | User rating: 4 / 5 after 10 vote(s) | No comments yet

The belief that dinosaurs underwent explosive species diversification just before they were wiped out is an illusion, for the beasts' main evolutionary shifts took place millions of years before, a study says. ...


Professor Examines the Effects of Climate Change on Civilizations

August 12, 2008 | User rating: 4.6 / 5 after 12 vote(s) | User comments: 1

Global warming is currently one the world's most pressing issues, but the phenomenon of climate change is not specific to the 21st century. A new book by anthropologist Brian Fagan takes a look at the global ...


Archaeological excavations uncover Roman temple in Zippori (Sepphoris)

August 11, 2008 | User rating: 4.1 / 5 after 7 vote(s) | No comments yet

Ruins of a Roman temple from the second century CE have recently been unearthed in the Zippori National Park in Israel. Above the temple are foundations of a church from the Byzantine period. The excavations, ...


Rock art marks transformations in traditional Peruvian societies

August 04, 2008 | User rating: 4.4 / 5 after 5 vote(s) | No comments yet

Peru is one of the Latin American countries, like Argentina and Brazil, where rock art is thought to have developed throughout a period stretching from 10,000 BC to 1500 AD. The wealth and diversity of the series of pictorial ...


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