A tiny bone is changing how we think about Neanderthals0
- Ancient Archeology, From Around the Web
- July 6, 2021
A tiny piece of bone that once belonged to a giant Ice Age deer is changing how we think about Neanderthals.

A tiny piece of bone that once belonged to a giant Ice Age deer is changing how we think about Neanderthals.

An underwater explosion launched a towering column of fire into the sky over the gas-rich Caspian Sea on Sunday, in a stunning display said to have been caused by a so-called “mud volcano” in Azerbaijan.

It is a mystery that has confounded experts for centuries – how were huge stones transported 180 miles (290km) from the Preseli Hills to Stonehenge?

For the first time, astronomers have observed black holes gobbling up neutron stars “like Pac Man.”

The technology that surveys our skies isn’t designed to spot and identify everything that flies.

This Friday is World UFO Day, a date promoted by those who believe that “a world watches over us.”

THE question ‘are we alone in the universe?’ has been debated for centuries – but some Oswestry residents are almost certain we are not living on the only planet to host life.

THE SAMPLES ARE AN INDICATION THAT MARS MAY HAVE HAD HOSPITABLE CONDITIONS FOR MILLIONS OF YEARS.

It was an asteroid strike that doomed the dinosaurs to extinction 66 million years ago.

On Asteroid Day, a reminder. The ones to worry about are almost never the ones in the alarmist headlines.



