Latest science news in Paleontology & Archaeology

4,000-Year-Old "Missing Pyramid" Found

16 years ago from CBSNews - Science

Egyptian archaeologists have unveiled a 4,000-year-old "missing pyramid" that is believed to have been discovered by an archaeologist almost 200 years ago and never seen again.

Mountains could have growth spurts

16 years ago from MSNBC: Science

The Andes Mountains may have growth spurts, doubling their height in as little as 2 million to 4 million years, U.S. researchers reported on Thursday.

Asteroid may have killed Iceman

16 years ago from UPI

BERGAMO, Italy, June 5 (UPI) -- A British scientist said a prehistoric mummy known as the Iceman may have been killed by an asteroid.

Study: Prehistoric people fought for women

16 years ago from UPI

DURHAM, England, June 5 (UPI) -- British anthropologists say they have found the first evidence that suggests fighting over women occurred as early as prehistoric times in Europe.

PHOTOS: Lost Egypt Pyramid Found Near Bull Tombs

16 years ago from National Geographic

Missing beneath the sands for decades, the ancient monument and tomb have come to light again—along with clues to age-old mysteries.

Fibonacci sequence fronts new nanoscience building at Bristol University

16 years ago from Physorg

A famous mathematical pattern has inspired the stunning curved sail façade of Bristol University`s new £11 million Centre for Nanoscience and Quantum Information.

Rope bridge for wildlife successful

16 years ago from Science Alert

Preliminary research has found that a rope bridge built to help native animals safely cross a highway is being used succesfully, and by more species than imagined.

Rewriting Greenland's Immigration History

16 years ago from Science Daily

The first immigrants in Greenland were not Indians from the North American continent or Canadian Inuit as previously suggested. And it is not just a question of revising the Greenlandic...

PHOTOS: Human Sacrifices Found at Ancient Peru Site?

16 years ago from National Geographic

A headless skeleton and disembodied pairs of legs are among possible evidence of ritualized killing at the 4,000-year-old settlement—despite their period's peaceful reputation.

Darwin still causing waves after 150 years

16 years ago from Reuters:Science

LONDON (Reuters) - Speeches and a scientific meeting next month will kick off 18 months of events to celebrate the impact and lasting legacy of Charles Darwin, whose theories on...

Of Hobbits and Humans

16 years ago from PopSci

Big, Little: From left to right, a modern human female skull, a fragment of an older Palauan skull, and a model of a Homo floresiensis skull. Photo by Stephen...

Bigfoot Bounty: Reward Offered for Mysterious Monsters

16 years ago from Live Science

Bigfoot and lake monsters, beware: There's a price on your heads.

Online database shows Britain-Australia links

16 years ago from Physorg

Details of millions of Britons who travelled to Australia in the late 19th and early 20th century in search of economic success were released online Wednesday as part of a...

Decline at biggest UK puffin site

16 years ago from BBC News: Science & Nature

Puffin numbers at the UK's biggest single colony are declining, scientists report, amid signs of dwindling food.

Genome race and climate change vision vie for science book prize

16 years ago from The Guardian - Science

Craig Venter's Life Decoded and Mark Lynas Six Degrees have seen off competition from the likes of Stephen Pinker to reach the shortlist of the Royal Society's Science book prize

Rat Remains Suggest Humans Came Late to New Zealand

16 years ago from National Geographic

Polynesian explorers and possibly their rat stowaways arrived on the Pacific island in A.D. 1280, new carbon-dating analyses show.

Museum PR guy finds new dinosaur fossil

16 years ago from MSNBC: Science

A public relations coordinator for a Texas museum recently spotted the fossilized bones of a 75-million-year-old duckbilled dinosaur while taking a tour of the area where a mummified duckbill was...

Books: On Rounds, Observing the Suits, Not Saints

16 years ago from NY Times Science

The scope of Julie Salamon’s energetic book is ambitious but even the book’s problems wind up telling readers a great deal about modern hospitals.

Forest Disappearing in Papua New Guinea

16 years ago from NY Times Science

Papua New Guinea has been losing about 1.4 percent of its total forest cover, each year, a new analysis suggests.

Strong Evidence For A Genetic Marker For Nearsightedness

16 years ago from Science Daily

New research supports the theory that the refractive errors known as nearsightedness and farsightedness are primarily inherited. The group also identified the probable location---on the long arm of chromosome 5---of...

Ancient man killed 'love rivals'

16 years ago from BBC News: Science & Nature

Prehistoric man may have executed male rivals in order to steal their women, research by Durham scientists suggests.

Giant Fortress's Remains Found in Egypt

16 years ago from National Geographic

Archaeologists have found more remnants of the ancient fort of Tharu in the Sinai Peninsula, bolstering theories of its political and strategic importance.

Rodent Bones of Contention

16 years ago from Science NOW

Rat fossils may settle dispute over when humans reached New Zealand

DNA reveals sister power in Ancient Greece

16 years ago from Physorg

University of Manchester researchers have revealed how women, as well as men, held positions of power in ancient Greece by right of birth.

Genetic mutation linked to walking on all fours

16 years ago from Biology News Net

What are the genes implicated in upright walking of humans? The discovery of four families in which some members only walk on all fours (quadrupedality) may help us...

Unravelling the mystery of the kitty litter parasite in marine mammals

16 years ago from Physorg

Researchers at California Polytechnic State University have discovered what may be a clue to the mystery of why marine mammals around the world are succumbing to a parasite that is...

Living Fossils Have Long- And Short-term Memory Despite Lacking Brain Structures Of Modern Cephalopods

16 years ago from Science Daily

Nautilus, the ancient living ancestors of modern cephalopods, have both long and short-term memory, despite lacking the brain structures that modern cephalopods evolved for long-term memory.

Gene Studies Tell Placenta's Tale

16 years ago from Science NOW

Mother-fetus lifeline evolved from a combination of ancient and new genes