[Related: Researchers want to unlock the genetics of the world’s tiniest animals.] ...
Research links human arrival on Cyprus to the extinction of dwarf elephants and hippos, shedding light on prehistoric human ...
The popularity of these so-called caveman or Stone Age diets is based on the idea that modern humans evolved to eat the way hunter-gatherers did during the Paleolithic—the period from about 2.6 ...
An analysis of around a dozen teenagers who lived during the Paleolithic reveals that they hit puberty around the same time ...
Scientists have unraveled a mystery about the disappearance of dwarf hippos and elephants that once roamed the picturesque ...
The paleolithic, or paleo, diet – aka the stone age, hunter-gatherer or caveman diet – is based on the idea that if we eat like our ancient ancestors, we’ll be healthier and reduce our risk ...
Most paleo diet food lists feature a variation of grass-fed meat, vegetables, nuts, and fruits. Find bonus foods, like snacks ...
During the Late Pleistocene, an epoch lasting from around 130,000 to 12,000 years ago, Cyprus was home to only two species of ...
Moving forward, the research team hopes to explore additional Paleolithic sites in North ... meat played an important role in the diet of hunter-gatherers before the Neolithic transition.
Now, an international team of scientists found that the first paleolithic hunter-gatherers may have first driven the hippos and then the elephants to extinction in less than 1,000 years.