Stone age humans were using poison for hunting far longer than previously believed. In A Nutshell Chemical traces survived ...
Best-selling Swiss author Erich von Daeniken, who built a lucrative career on his argument, rubbished by scientists and ...
As technology accelerates progress, a paradox emerges: digital nomadism is unraveling humanity back to its hunter-gatherer ...
Thanks to genetic science, gene editing, and techniques like cloning, it’s now possible to move DNA through time, studying ...
The first Homo sapiens to arrive in the Americas may have originated in a region covering today’s Hokkaido, Sakhalin and the ...
Altogether, they reconstructed 11 ancient herpesvirus genomes. The oldest came from a young girl found in southern Italy who ...
Explore jungle survival and primitive building techniques, including constructing small structures using mud and clay, ...
Archaeologists have identified hundreds of ancient structures hidden beneath the dense canopy of Ecuador's Andean Chocó ...
New chemical analysis of quartz microliths from South Africa confirms that humans were skilled with poison long ago.
Cutting-edge LiDAR technology has revealed an astonishing secret concealed beneath the dense jungle canopy of Ecuador's Andean Chocó: hundreds of pre-Hispanic structures that dramatically expand our ...
This exclusive Cogs of War interview is with Bret C. Devereaux, an ancient military historian and Teaching Assistant ...
Debuting February 3 at Eclipso NYC in the heart of Manhattan, Colosseum The Legendary Arena reinforces New York City as ...