Latest science news in Paleontology & Archaeology

The Closest Living Relative of the First Animal Has Finally Been Found

1 year ago from Scientific American

A debate has been settled over the earliest animal ancestor—a free-swimming creature with a well-developed nervous system

Stone Engravings of Mysterious Ancient Megastructures May Be World's Oldest 'Blueprints'

1 year ago from Scientific American

Stone engravings of ancient megastructures called desert kites may be the earliest “blueprints” ever discovered

The First Kiss in Recorded History Dates Back Nearly 5,000 Years

1 year ago from Scientific American

Kissing probably predates Homo sapiens as a species, but the first texts documenting the beso go back to the early Bronze Age

Largest and oldest T. rex named "Scotty" revealed

1 year ago from CBSNews - Science

The largest tyrannosaurus rex to ever roam the earth is about to make his official debut. CBS News got a look at "Scotty" before he goes on display at a...

Adapt or Die

1 year ago from CBSNews - Science

The climate cycles that have driven mass extinctions, are shortening and becoming more severe. The species that can adapt to environmental changes survive, while others simply die off. CBSN Originals...

Adapt or Die

1 year ago from CBSNews - Science

The climate cycles that have driven mass extinctions, are shortening and becoming more severe. The species that can adapt to environmental changes survive, while others simply die off. CBSN Originals...

Column: Contrary to latest claims, there's still not a speck of evidence that COVID escaped from a Chinese lab

1 year ago from LA Times - Health

The Wall Street Journal tries to revive the lab leak theory on COVID's origins as a gift to the GOP, but it's still nonsense.

Another COVID-19 booster shot may be coming. But interest is waning

1 year ago from LA Times - Health

Another COVID-19 booster may be on the way this spring, but it remains to be seen how much of an appetite there will be for more shots in California or...

Two mass shootings in three days. Are these copycat crimes?

1 year ago from LA Times - Science

Suicides tend to occur in clusters that suggest contagion, but there is little evidence that murders or mass shootings follow the same pattern, experts say.

Are Californians destroying the Amazon? A Sebastião Salgado exhibit raises hard questions

1 year ago from LA Times - Science

The beauty of the Amazon rainforest and its peoples, and the threats facing them, emerge in a Sebastião Salgado photo show at the California Science Center.

Abcarian: Mask mandates? COVID origins? Why are we still having these debates?

1 year ago from LA Times - Science

We may never have a definitive answer to COVID's origins. Reserve your anger for the way the Trump administration bungled its response to the disease.

Opinion: I called for more research on the COVID 'lab leak theory.' Here's what I found out

1 year ago from LA Times - Science

Contrary to conclusions by the Department of Energy and the FBI, the science on the pandemic's origins stacks up in favor of a jump from animals to humans.

Column: America's decline in life expectancy speaks volumes about our problems

1 year ago from LA Times - Science

After decades of increasing longevity, Americans are facing shorter life spans than their predecessors and their rich-country peers. In states where Republicans set the agenda, it's even worse.

In Southern California, everything is blooming everywhere all at once

1 year ago from LA Times - Science

The atmospheric rivers are gone, but the water they dumped on Southern California has prompted dormant plants to bloom for the first time in years. Native wildflowers and invasive weeds...

UC Berkeley spreads the gospel of data science with new college, free curriculum

1 year ago from LA Times - Science

UC Berkeley is spreading the gospel of data science, a high-demand, high-earning field that can advance social justice, with a proposed new college and free curriculum to schools.

Vintage Miller Lite delivery truck with 6 pack-shaped fridge listed for sale

4 years ago from UPI

A non-running vehicle listed for sale in Missouri is drawing attention for an unusual feature -- a large refrigeration shaped like a six-pack of Miller Lite beer.

Paleontologists find evidence of new mass extinction 233 million years ago

4 years ago from UPI

Paleontologists have unearthed evidence of a new mass extinction that occurred during the Late Triassic, some 233 million years ago.

Watch: T. rex skeleton expected to fetch up to $8M at New York auction

4 years ago from UPI

One of the most complete Tyrannosaurus rex skeletons in the world is headed for the auction block in New York and is expected to sell for between $6 million and...

Did our early ancestors boil their food in hot springs?

4 years ago from Science Daily

Scientists have found evidence of hot springs near sites where ancient hominids settled, long before the control of fire.

World's largest DNA sequencing of Viking skeletons reveals they weren't all Scandinavian

4 years ago from Science Daily

Invaders, pirates, warriors - the history books taught us that Vikings were brutal predators who travelled by sea from Scandinavia to pillage and raid their way across Europe and beyond....

World's oldest animal sperm found in tiny crustaceans trapped in Myanmar amber

4 years ago from Science Daily

New research has led to the discovery of world's oldest animal sperm inside a tiny crustacean trapped in amber around 100 million years ago in Myanmar.

Ancient footprints in Saudi Arabia show how humans left Africa

4 years ago from Physorg

Around 120,000 years ago in what is now northern Saudi Arabia, a small band of homo sapiens stopped to drink and forage at a shallow lake that was also frequented...

Discovery of a new mass extinction

4 years ago from Physorg

It's not often a new mass extinction is identified; after all, such events were so devastating they really stand out in the fossil record. In a new paper, published today...

A new species of spider

4 years ago from Physorg

During a research stay in the highlands of Colombia conducted as part of her doctorate, Charlotte Hopfe, Ph.D. student under the supervision of Prof. Dr. Thomas Scheibel at the Biomaterials...

DNA data shows not all Vikings were Scandinavian

4 years ago from UPI

In the public imagination, the Vikings were closely-related clans of Scandinavians who marauded their way across Europe, but new genetic analysis paints a more complicated picture.

North Korea: South ‘digging its grave’ with military spending

4 years ago from UPI

North Korea state media is condemning Seoul for a recent defense budget hike, calling the move "yet another military provocation."

'South Park' pandemic special to air Sept. 30

4 years ago from UPI

"South Park" will address the COVID-19 pandemic in an hour-long special on Comedy Central.

Ancient volcanoes once boosted ocean carbon, but humans are now far outpacing them

4 years ago from Science Daily

A new study of an ancient period that is considered the closest natural analog to the era of modern human carbon emissions has found that massive volcanism sent great waves...