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  1. Home
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  3. archaeology
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  5. Page 2
Home»Posts tagged with»archaeology (Page 2)

How aerial thermal imagery is revolutionizing archaeology

By Amy Olson | Dartmouth College on Sep 25, 2017   Science/Education  

How aerial thermal imagery is revolutionizing archaeology

A Dartmouth-led study has demonstrated how the latest aerial thermal imagery is transforming archaeology due to advancements in technology. Today’s thermal cameras, commercial drones and photogrammetric software has introduced a new realm of possibilities for collecting site data. The findings, published in Advances in Archaeological Practice, serve as a manual on how to use aerial thermography, […]

Archaeologist Explains Innovation of “Fluting” Ancient Stone Weaponry

By Metin Eren | Kent State University on Apr 4, 2017   Featured, Science/Education  

Archaeologist Explains Innovation of “Fluting” Ancient Stone Weaponry

Approximately 13,500 years after nomadic Clovis hunters crossed the frozen land bridge from Asia to North America, researchers are still asking questions and putting together clues as to how they not only survived in a new landscape with unique new challenges but adapted with stone tools and weapons to thrive for thousands of years.  Kent […]

Ancient Fossil Reveals First Evidence of Live Birth in Animals Thought to Lay Eggs

By University of Bristol on Feb 15, 2017   Featured, Science/Education  

Ancient Fossil Reveals First Evidence of Live Birth in Animals Thought to Lay Eggs

  The first ever evidence of live birth in an animal group previously thought to lay eggs exclusively has been discovered by an international team of scientists, including a paleontologist from the University of Bristol. The remarkable 250 million-year-old fossil from China shows an embryo inside the mother. Live birth is well known in mammals, […]

Study Reveals How Diet Shaped Human Evolution

By AFTAU on Mar 30, 2016   Featured, Science/Education  

Study Reveals How Diet Shaped Human Evolution

Homo sapiens, the ancestor of modern humans, shared the planet with Neanderthals, a close, heavy-set relative that dwelled almost exclusively in Ice-Age Europe, until some 40,000 years ago. Neanderthals were similar to Homo sapiens, with whom they sometimes mated — but they were different, too. Among these many differences, Neanderthals were shorter and stockier, with […]

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