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Archaeologists have made significant discoveries in the Amazon rainforest and Ethiopia, shedding light on pre-Columbian societies and early hominin populations. In the Amazon, ancient earthworks built by pre-Columbian societies have been found, with archaeologists believing there may be 10,000 more waiting to be discovered. In Ethiopia, a 2-million-year-old jawbone identified as Homo erectus provides the earliest evidence of hominins living in a high-altitude area. These findings offer valuable insights into the cultural and biological history of these regions, highlighting the advanced skills of ancient Europeans in weaving objects from plant fibers and the ability of humans to adapt to extreme environments during the last glacial period in Spain. These discoveries contribute to our understanding of ancient civilizations and human evolution.
Excavations at a rock shelter have revealed that humans lived in high and remote regions of Spain during the coldest part of the last glacial period, between 21,400 and 15,100 years ago https://t.co/UyLvmVrm5o
23,000-Year-Old Teeth Fill an Ice-Age Gap https://t.co/dTzqADZwzB
For #FossilFriday today I am so pleased to share the new results by Margherita Mussi and collaborators from the Garba IV site, with the beautiful little GAR IVE infant jaw of Homo erectus. “Homo erectus keeps getting older” https://t.co/xMVE3pRbie https://t.co/P4mGnkLNFE
Ancient Humans Made Expeditions to This 750,000-Year-Old Workshop https://t.co/mQtt4v4EVi
Ancient earthworks built by pre-Columbian societies have been found across the Amazon, and archaeologists think there may be 10,000 more waiting to be discovered. https://t.co/znFs7l1C4j
Reexamination of ancient #jawbone found in Ethiopia concludes it came from #HomoErectus infant @sciencemagazine https://t.co/bjba9d6KRj https://t.co/hulrDjeIo8
Excavations at a rock shelter have revealed that humans lived in high and remote regions of Spain during the coldest part of the last glacial period, between 21,400 and 15,100 years ago https://t.co/Jz03Owk3WV
A 2-million-year-old jawbone from Ethiopia, identified as Homo erectus, is the earliest evidence of hominins living in a high-altitude area. https://t.co/5atyVihgfj
Intricate baskets and shoes found in a Spanish cave show that people living in Europe thousands of years ago were skilled at weaving objects from plant fibres https://t.co/46vnIoavrv
A 2 million-year-old jawbone from Ethiopia, identified as Homo erectus, is the earliest evidence of hominins living in a high-altitude area. https://t.co/tJW8nwr52X
Variation in enamel thickness within the genus Homo (2012) https://t.co/hnNQEYlZFt
Ancient earthworks built by pre-Columbian societies have been found across the Amazon, and archaeologists think there may be 10,000 more waiting to be discovered. https://t.co/z20m9fGsER