All Articles Tagged As: migration
Study will contribute to our understanding of early humans in North America
...> Full Article
 | Palaeontologist has helped to uncover compelling new evidence that New Zealand was discovered 1000 years later than commonly believed. ...> Full Article |
 | Based on 14,000-year-old seaweed fragments found at a Chilean archaeological site, researchers suggest that the first humans in the Americas may have migrated along the Pacific coast. ...> Full Article |
 | Archaeologist is following tool migration to learn how humans migrated throughout the world ...> Full Article |
Anthropologists now believes the first Americans came to this country 1,000 to 2,000 years earlier than the 13,500 years ago previously thought, which could shift historic timelines.
...> Full Article
 | One of the keys enabling the earliest human ancestors to trade a forest home for more open country may have been the ability to gather underground foods. Now a team of scientists reports for the first time that in Tanzania our closest living relatives, chimpanzees, are using sticks and pieces of bark to dig for edible roots, tubers and bulbs. ...> Full Article |
Cashew nut fossils have been identified in 47-million year old lake sediment in Germany, revealing that the cashew genus Anacardium was once distributed in Europe, remote from its modern "native" distribution in Central and South America. It was previously proposed that Anacardium and its African sister genus, Fegimanra, diverged from their common ancestor when the landmasses of Africa and South America separated. However, groundbreaking new data in the October issue of the International Journal of Plant Sciences indicate that Europe may be an important biogeographic link between Africa and the New World.
...> Full Article
|
|