Latest science news in Paleontology & Archaeology

Researchers make noises of pre-Columbian society

16 years ago from Physorg

(AP) -- Scientists were fascinated by the ghostly find: a human skeleton buried in an Aztec temple with a clay, skull-shaped whistle in each bony hand. But no one...

Songbirds suffer from competing with noise

16 years ago from UPI

ST. ANDREWS, Scotland, June 29 (UPI) -- Songbirds trying to compete with city noise are damaging themselves and possibly leaving their offspring a poorer genetic inheritance, European researchers...

Lyme Disease Bug Came From Europe Before Ice Age

16 years ago from Science Daily

The bacterium responsible for Lyme disease, Borrelia burgdorferi, originated in America, or so researchers thought. Now, however, scientists has shown that this bug in fact came from Europe, originating from...

Sweat, luck and eureka: Recipes for scientific discovery

16 years ago from Physorg

Every week thousands of academic articles heralding discoveries in medicine and science are vetted and validated before being published in no-nonsense journals with names such as "Acta Crystallographica," "Methods in...

Ancient Olympics: ‘Like Vince Lombardi On The PGA Circuit’

16 years ago from Science Daily

The modern Olympic ideals differ dramatically from the way the games were actually played in ancient Greece, says a classicist who has heavily researched the Olympic past. The ancient games...

Bird study filled with surprises

16 years ago from UPI

CHICAGO, June 28 (UPI) -- Falcons and parrots are more closely related than previously thought, researchers have found.

Loggerhead turtle to be freed

16 years ago from UPI

BRUNSWICK, Ga., June 28 (UPI) -- A 10-year-old female loggerhead turtle is about to roam free in the Atlantic Ocean after spending her life so far in aquariums...

DNA study shakes up bird family tree

16 years ago from UPI

CHICAGO, June 28 (UPI) -- The Field Museum in Chicago said a massive study of bird genetics has completely redrawn the avian evolutionary tree.

Early origins of maize in Mexico

16 years ago from Biology News Net

The ancestors of maize originally grew wild in Mexico and were radically different from the plant that is now one of the most important crops in the world. ...

VIDEO: Dinosaur Mummy's Meal Revealed

16 years ago from National Geographic

A fossilized dinosaur known as Leonardo has shed light on what Montana was like 77 million years ago—including what the duck-billed reptile ate.

Amazon Tribe Attacked by Masked Gunners

16 years ago from National Geographic

Footage released by human rights groups shows masked gunners opening fire on Makuxi Indians after the tribe tried to force a farming operation off a national Indian reserve. With video.

Museum confirms discovery of rare fossil

16 years ago from MSNBC: Science

Scientists with the Virginia Museum of Natural History have confirmed the discovery of a 500 million-year-old fossil called a stromatolite.

Pumice As A Time Witness

16 years ago from Science Daily

Chemical fingerprints of volcanic eruptions and numerous pumice lump finds from archaeological excavations illustrate relations between individual advanced civilizations in the Eastern Mediterranean. Thanks to new tests and to the...

New Fossils Of Extremely Primitive 4-Legged Creatures Close The Gap Between Fish And Land Animals

16 years ago from Science Daily

New exquisitely preserved fossils from Latvia cast light on a key event in our own evolutionary history, when our ancestors left the water and ventured onto land. Scientists have reconstructed...

Researchers Test Canine Tooth Strength for Clues to Behavior of Early Human Ancestors

16 years ago from Physorg

Measuring and testing the teeth of living primates could provide a window into the behavior of the earliest human ancestors, based on their fossilized remains. Research funded by the National...

ER shut down at Tobique Valley Hospital

16 years ago from CBC: Health

The Tobique Valley Hospital in Plaster Rock, N.B., is closing its emergency department and cancelling its in-patient service.

Online Dating: Where Technology and Evolution Collide

16 years ago from Physorg

When searching for a soul mate, you might think that the more options, the better. But the rise of technology - notably, the Internet - has thrown a...

PHOTOS: Midwest Floods' Animal Victims

16 years ago from National Geographic

Thousands of pets, pigs, deer, and other animals were left stranded or worse by floodwaters that rose to rooftops in some areas of the U.S. Midwest.

Dinosaur bone in New Zealand

16 years ago from Science Alert

A fossil hunter has discovered that one of the largest known dinosaurs, a titanosaurid, almost certainly roamed New Zealand about 80 million years ago.

Opinion: Life changes

16 years ago from Science Alert

If our grandmothers did not have such difficulty in facing the menopause why do modern women, questions Helen Lobato?

Climate change could kill Calif. plants

16 years ago from UPI

BERKELEY, Calif., June 25 (UPI) -- A University of California-Berkeley study contends climate change could prove deadly to two-thirds of California's native plants.

Spanish lawmakers boost ape rights

16 years ago from MSNBC: Science

Spain's parliament voiced its support on Wednesday for the rights of great apes to life and freedom in what will apparently be the first time any national legislature has called...

Fishy Ancestors of Humans Surprisingly Diverse

16 years ago from National Geographic

The ancestors of the first four-legged land animals already showed signs of the group's trademark diversity, suggests a new fossil reconstruction of a transition species.

Texas-Size Asteroid Slammed Early Mars, Studies Say

16 years ago from National Geographic

A huge impact basin in the red planet's northern hemisphere could explain why the crust there is so much thinner than crust in the south, three new papers report.

Tropical habitats disappearing fast

16 years ago from Science Alert

A new literature review has found that tropical habitats are quickly disappearing, a loss that could result in ecological disasters such as flooding and famine.

Floods, droughts make mild diseases deadly: study

16 years ago from Reuters:Science

CHICAGO (Reuters) - Extreme floods and droughts brought on by climate change can turn normally harmless infections into significant threats, international researchers said on Tuesday.

Warming May Make 'Perfect Storm' of Disease

16 years ago from Live Science

Now the first clear example of such a perfect storm of diseases has been discovered by an international team of scientists.

"Arab" Found in Danish Iron-Age Grave

16 years ago from National Geographic

DNA analysis of ancient Danish skeletons, including one with Arabian genes, suggests Scandinavians living 2,000 years ago were more diverse genetically than today, scientists say.