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A couple of dog walkers discovered human footprints in the sand, but they vanished within 48 hours before they could be fully studied
On a windswept afternoon at Lunan Bay Beach, dogwalkers Ivor Campbell and Jenny Snedden made a rare archaeological discovery: footprints preserved in the sand. However, it quickly turned into a race ...
Preserved brains tend to look like normal brains, but they're often one-fifth of the typical size. Alexandra Morton-Hayward If they’re lucky, archaeologists find human bones or teeth that have been ...
If you dig into an archaeological site - and who among us hasn't? - you may uncover ancient human teeth and bones. But scientists are also finding brains. Unlike skin, muscle and other soft tissue, ...
A new study has challenged previously held views that brain preservation in the archaeological record is extremely rare. The team compiled a new archive of preserved human brains, which highlighted ...
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Archaeologists Found a 800,000-Year-Old Human Footprints Under UK Sand, And They’re Perfectly Preserved
Footprints dating back 800,000 years have been uncovered on a beach in Norfolk, England, offering one of the oldest direct records of early human presence in northern Europe. Discovered at Happisburgh ...
The human genome is a rich, complex record of migration, encounters, and inheritance written over thousands of millennia.
This story is free to read because readers choose to support LAist. If you find value in independent local reporting, make a donation to power our newsroom today. If you dig into an archaeological ...
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