Latest science news in Paleontology & Archaeology

Age confirmed for 'Eve,' mother of all humans

13 years ago from MSNBC: Science

A maternal ancestor to all living humans called mitochondrial Eve likely lived about 200,000 years ago, at roughly the same time anatomically modern humans are believed to have emerged, a...

Moon shrinking with age

13 years ago from CBC: Technology & Science

The moon may be shrinking. Not to worry though, lovers and crooners, it won't be disappearing any time soon.

Stores remove recalled eggs from shelves

13 years ago from LA Times - Science

The eggs, from a major producer in Iowa, have been linked to a salmonella outbreak that has left hundreds of people across the U.S. sick, including as many as 266...

Our ever-changing English | Alison Flood

13 years ago from The Guardian - Science

I get grumpy about crimes against language. But we Brits have been lamenting declining standards of English for centuriesPerhaps the Daily Mail should take a leaf out of Jonathan Swift's book and instead...

New fossils could be oldest animals

13 years ago from UPI

PRINCETON, N.J., Aug. 18 (UPI) -- U.S. researchers say they found what may be the oldest fossils of fully developed animal bodies, pushing evidence of animal life into an...

Evidence of 'zombie' parasite in fossil

13 years ago from UPI

EXETER, England, Aug. 18 (UPI) -- Parasites that control their hosts and turn them into "zombies" may have learned their macabre trick almost 50 million years ago, U.K. researchers...

Humans said innocent in mammoth extinction

13 years ago from UPI

DURHAM, England, Aug. 18 (UPI) -- The disappearance of ancient grasslands, not human hunting, may have led to the extinction of animals such as the woolly mammoth, U.K. researchers...

Georgia archaeologists find Confederate POW camp

13 years ago from MSNBC: Science

Preserved for nearly 150 years, perhaps by its own obscurity, a short-lived Confederate prison camp began yielding treasures from the Civil War almost as soon as archeologists began searching for...

What happened to the seals?

13 years ago from The Guardian - Science

Dozens of dead seals have washed up in Scotland with strange spiral wounds. What could be the culprit?It's a mammalian mystery that would baffle even Sherlock Holmes: the unexplained deaths of dozens of...

Creation Museum Creates Discomfort For Some Visitors

13 years ago from Live Science

Kentucky's Creation Museum makes some visitors uncomfortable with depictions of Adam and Eve, humans and dinosaurs coexisting and Noah building his Ark.

Giant turtle graveyard found

13 years ago from Science Alert

Researchers have found the remains of giant horned turtles in a human cemetery in Vanuatu, shedding light on ancient Pacific life.

Secrets of a vanished English landscape: Geologists examine 5,000-year-old 'fossilized' landscape

13 years ago from Science Daily

A team of scientists in the UK has published new research on a fossilized landscape, providing insights into how an ancient environment functioned.

PlayStation 3 memory beefed up in North America

13 years ago from Physorg

Sony Computer Entertainment America announced Tuesday it is beefing up the storage capacity of PlayStation 3 (PS3) videogame consoles that will be available in North America.

Perforated blobs may be early sponges

13 years ago from Sciencenews.org

Australian find could be oldest fossil evidence of multicellular animals

S.Korea archaeologists uncover 7,000-year-old oar

13 years ago from Physorg

South Korean archaeologists said Tuesday they have unearthed a rare neolithic period wooden boat oar, believed to date back about 7,000 years but still in good condition.

Spinal gap of barbeled dragonfishes mystery solved

13 years ago from Physorg

(PhysOrg.com) -- The mystery of why a group of deep sea fishes has a gap between their skull and spine has been solved by an international team of scientists,...

New Public Road to Split the Serengeti?

13 years ago from National Geographic

The proposed road in Tanzania would cut through the Serengeti, possibly disrupting the annual wildebeest migration, conservationists say. ...

Richard Darwin Keynes obituary

13 years ago from The Guardian - Science

Physiologist and author of several books on Charles Darwin, his great-grandfatherRichard Darwin Keynes, who has died aged 90, was a great-grandson of Charles Darwin and the nephew of John Maynard Keynes. Richard rose...

Kihansi spray toads make historic return to Tanzania

13 years ago from Science Blog

In a bold effort to save one of the world's rarest amphibians from extinction, one hundred Kihansi spray toads have been flown home to Tanzania after being painstakingly reared at...

Uruguay goes regional with deep sea port plans for Rocha

13 years ago from UPI

MONTEVIDEO, Uruguay, Aug. 17 (UPI) -- Uruguay is cobbling together a regional partnership around its planned deep sea port as part of President Jose Mujica's strategy to raise at...

Ancient temple complex discovered near Le Mans

13 years ago from The Guardian - Science

Enormous religious site in French countryside may have been devoted to worshipping many godsExcavations near the antique city of Vindunum (now Le Mans) have revealed a vast religious site dating from the first...

How business should learn from animals

13 years ago from BBC News: Science & Nature

Author Peter Miller discussed with Katty Kay his findings on the subject of the science of 'swarming' and its links between the animal kingdom and humans.

UC researchers examine patterns of minority suburbanisation circling the nation's major cities

13 years ago from

Are minorities moving into suburbs that are essentially an extension of the inner city? Or are the outer-ring suburbs becoming more diverse? University of Cincinnati researchers tracked 30 years of...

Afghan archaeologists find Buddhist site as war rages

13 years ago from Reuters:Science

KABUL (Reuters) - Archaeologists in Afghanistan, where Taliban Islamists are fighting the Western-backed government, have uncovered Buddhist-era remains in an area south of Kabul, an official said on Tuesday.

San Cristóbal De Rapaz Journal: High in the Andes, Guardians of an Inca Mystery

13 years ago from NY Times Science

The village of San Cristóbal de Rapaz has one of the last known collections of khipus — strands of knotted cords that may explain how the Incas ruled without a...

New evidence in Mount Everest mystery

13 years ago from UPI

LONDON, Aug. 16 (UPI) -- Canadian researchers say they believe they've settled a historic controversy about the first men to conquer the summit of Mount Everest in the Himalayas. ...

U-M researchers part of team that discovered rare gold coin in Israel

13 years ago from Physorg

Sharon Herbert and her team were wrapping up their dig at the Tel Kedesh site in Israel, sweeping the site in the 140-degree heat, when a student showed University of...

BP spill puts Alberta birds at risk: expert

13 years ago from CBC: Technology & Science

The massive BP oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico could kill off some of Alberta's migratory birds, some bird experts fear.