Latest science news in Paleontology & Archaeology

"Oldest Church" Discovery "Ridiculous," Critics Say

15 years ago from National Geographic

Experts are skeptical of an archaeologist's claims to have found the world's first Christian church in a cave in Jordan.

Study refutes pure Scandinavian race myth

15 years ago from UPI

COPENHAGEN, Denmark, June 11 (UPI) -- Forensic scientists studying human remains in two ancient Danish burial grounds dating to the Iron Age say they found a man of...

New mobile paleontology lab begins work

15 years ago from UPI

BOZEMAN, Mont., June 11 (UPI) -- U.S. paleontologists who search for dinosaur fossils in Eastern Montana can now chemically analyze fossils on site the same day they're excavated.

Tetrapod burrows are found in Antarctica

15 years ago from UPI

SEATTLE, June 11 (UPI) -- U.S. paleontologists say they have found fossilized burrows of tetrapods in Antarctica dating from the Early Triassic epoch, about 245 million years ago.

Woolly-Mammoth Gene Study Changes Extinction Theory

15 years ago from Physorg

A large genetic study of the extinct woolly mammoth has revealed that the species was not one large homogenous group, as scientists previously had assumed, and that it did not...

Ancient Roman Working-Class Burial Ground Excavated

15 years ago from National Geographic

Three hundred first-century skeletons unearthed near Rome's airport offer a rare glimpse into the lives of ancient longshoremen and a disabled adult.

Jon Henley on the Komodo dragon

15 years ago from The Guardian - Science

The world's largest lizard is a powerful predator with razor-sharp teeth, but is the Komodo dragon really as fearsome as we think? Jon Henley reports

Uncovering the truth behind the largest marsupial to walk the Earth

15 years ago from Physorg

University of Queensland research is uncovering the truth behind the largest marsupial ever to walk the earth - the 2.5 tonne wombat-like Diprotodon.

Roman-era graveyard for the poor found intact

15 years ago from MSNBC: Science

Archaeologists have discovered a nearly 2,000-year-old, intact necropolis on the outskirts of Rome that gives a rare insight into the lives of poor laborers in the Roman era.

Rat free declaration for island

15 years ago from BBC News: Science & Nature

The Hebridean island of Canna is to be officially declared rat free.

Ancient Greek grave found during subway work

15 years ago from Physorg

(AP) -- Greek authorities say subway construction work in the northern city of Thessaloniki has unearthed an ancient grave with a wealth of golden jewelry.

Mystery of infamous 'New England Dark Day' solved by 3 rings

15 years ago from Physorg

At noon, it was black as night. It was May 19, 1780 and some people in New England thought judgment day was at hand. Accounts of that day, which became...

Saliva samples to reveal Alaskan roots

15 years ago from UPI

ANCHORAGE, Alaska, June 6 (UPI) -- An Alaskan heritage group is sponsoring DNA testing to find descendants of a man who lived 10,300 years ago.

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

15 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.

NOAA: Caribbean monk seal becomes extinct

15 years ago from AP Science

HONOLULU (AP) -- The Caribbean monk seal has gone extinct....

Machu Picchu ruin 'found earlier'

15 years ago from BBC News: Science & Nature

Westerners found Peru's Machu Picchu 40 years earlier than previously thought, historians say.

"Too late" to save Pacific island nation from submersion

15 years ago from News @ Nature

Kiribati's 97,000 citizens face homelessness this century, president warns.

Mountains could have growth spurts

15 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.

Footprints Show 1st Americans Came 25,000 Years Early?

15 years ago from National Geographic

Apparent human footprints in 40,000-year-old volcanic ash may provide a clue to when the first Americans arrived, a controversial new report says.

Dropping the Soap

15 years ago from PopSci

Your dirty hands can harbor millions of germs, but simply washing your hands with regular soap—making sure you vigorously rub them together for 30 seconds—will slough enough microbes down the...

Native Alaskans trace ancestry to 10,000-year-old skeleton

15 years ago from The Guardian - Science

Tlingit, Haida and Tsimshian Indians gathering in Juneau, Alaska, will get a chance to prove they're directly related to one of the very first Alaskans

See the Celestial Scales and the Scorpion

15 years ago from Space.com

Libra is the only star pattern that doesn't represent a person or animal.

380 Million Year Old Fishes Found With Unborn Embryos

15 years ago from Science Daily

Archaeologists have discovered a remarkable 380 million year old fossil placoderm fish with intact embryo and mineralized umbilical cord. The discovery makes the fossil the world's oldest known vertebrate mother....

Asteroid may have killed Iceman

15 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.

PHOTOS: Lost Egypt Pyramid Found Near Bull Tombs

15 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

15 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

15 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

15 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...