Researchers have discovered additional signs of a 29,000-year-old hunt after finding a stone spear tip in a cave bear vertebra in 2001. A fire 2,200 years ago in Iron Age Spain preserved a moment of life and war. A study reveals that paleolithic people settled in Cyprus earlier than previously believed, with human ancestors potentially hunting cave bears 300,000 years ago.
🗄️ From the archive: A fossil that sat exposed at a cave site for eight years upends human family tree. https://t.co/f9srg6HmHk
🗄️ From the archive: We know a lot about the T. rex that lived millions of years ago, but it’s still a wonder to scientists how it became the legendary predator. One discovery might change that. https://t.co/Bw2fi0txIh
Human ancestors may have hunted cave bears 300,000 years ago | Science https://t.co/af9jwWLRg9
Study finds paleolithic people settled in Cyprus thousands of years earlier than previously thought @flinders @PNASNews https://t.co/Pzvx6eGe3b
Study finds paleolithic people settled in Cyprus thousands of years earlier than previously thought https://t.co/eGZA6Y63Pi
A devastating fire 2,200 years ago preserved a moment of life and war in Iron Age Spain, down to a single gold earring @frontiersin https://t.co/MDahLpibT4
In 2001, researchers found a stone spear tip embedded in a cave bear vertebra—evidence of a hunt 29,000 years ago. Now, after more than 2 decades of additional research, dozens of additional signs have been found. https://t.co/BR5rZyUcTS @NewsfromScience