AMMAN - According to Associate Professor Phillip Edwards from the La Trobe University, the major objective of the 2024 season ...
One of them has been led by Associate Professor from La Trobe University Philip Edwards, who came with his students to Wadi Hammeh to study Natufian burials. Wadi Hammeh 27 (12,000–12,500 BC), is a ...
Archaeologists in Israel have discovered a collection of small, round stones with holes in the center, which may be among the earliest examples of wheel-like tools. These doughnut-shaped stones, ...
Over 100 small stone objects from Neolithic period are the earliest instance of 'spindle whorls,' used to spin fibers into yarn, predating previously known textile tools by 4,000 years The post 12,000 ...
The people of Nahal Ein Gev belonged to the Natufian culture, which thrived in the Levant (present-day Israel, Lebanon, and Syria) between 15,000 and 11,500 years ago. The Natufians were among the ...
A recent study by researchers from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem has revealed a fascinating discovery: tools known as spindle whorls, approximately 12,000 years old, found at the archaeological ...
The site is associated with the Natufian period, a time in the late Stone Age when humans had settled in permanent villages but had not yet developed agriculture or domesticated farm animals.
In honor of World Kindness Week, here are three heartwarming stories that showcase the incredible bonds between animals and humans. From a farmer using a blow dryer to revive an ailing newborn ...
giving the quagga a major win over the more-famous Woolly mammoth and Dodo bird in the global race to bring animals back from extinction.
In an incredible feat that redefines biological boundaries, scientists have successfully engineered animal cells that are capable of photosynthesis. This breakthrough, led by Professor Sachihiro ...
While I’m far from over it (see: my roundup of leopard print bags, shoes, coats, dresses, and more), I do want to call attention back to other animal prints that are just as chic, if not more ...