Anthropology.net
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anthropology.net
New evidence from Ormagi Ekhi, Georgia, shows how Neanderthals mastered the South Caucasus’s harsh ecology through mobility, cooperation, and tool innovation—reshaping our view of Ice Age survival. #Paleolithic #Archaeology #Neanderthals #Caucasus @antiquity.ac.uk
Mountains of Memory: How Neanderthals Endured the Wild Climate of the South Caucasus
Excavations at Ormagi Ekhi reveal how Ice Age foragers adapted to the mountains of Georgia, balancing cold, scarcity, and opportunity with the ingenuity that defined the Middle Palaeolithic.
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anthropology.net
9,000 years of skeletons show that bone aging is more than biology—it’s culture in motion. Holocene humans aged with the same skeletal rhythm despite changing lifestyles. #Anthropology #Archaeology #HumanEvolution #BoneHealth www.anthropology.net/p/when-bones...
When Bones Remember Movement: 9,000 Years of Aging, Labor, and Life in the Holocene
How ancient skeletons reveal that the story of human bone aging isn’t just biological—it’s cultural.
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A Byzantine child buried 900 years ago in Aphrodisias shows signs of a rare bone disease, Caffey disease, offering new insight into childhood health, care, and resilience in medieval Anatolia. #Bioarchaeology #Byzantine #Osteology #Paleopathology www.anthropology.net/p/a-swollen-...
A Swollen Legacy: The Byzantine Child Who Carried a Rare Bone Disease
A 12th-century skeleton from Aphrodisias offers a haunting glimpse into childhood illness, medical uncertainty, and resilience in the Byzantine world.
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anthropology.net
A 1,000-year-old microbiome from pre-Hispanic Mexico reveals how ancient diets, ecology, and bacteria co-shaped human life long before industrialization. #Archaeology #Microbiome #AncientDNA #Anthropology www.anthropology.net/p/the-forgot...
The Forgotten Gut of Zimapán
A thousand-year-old microbiome reveals how ancient Mexicans lived, ate, and shared their world with unseen companions.
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anthropology.net
New @science.org Advances model finds all small-scale societies—from Inuit to Amazonian farmers—obey the same law of innovation: each new tool costs more than it gives. The politics of invention began long before the state.
#Anthropology #Archaeology #CulturalEvolution
The Politics of Tools: How Small-Scale Societies Engineered the First Technologies of Power
Even the simplest toolkits, those of hunter-gatherers & early farmers, follow deep mathematical laws of innovation, revealing how efficiency, scarcity & identity shaped hierarchies
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anthropology.net
New excavations in Shandong reveal that early Zhou ritual platforms shaped China’s first shared identities long before the First Emperor. Political unity began not with conquest, but with communion. #Archaeology #Anthropology #China #StateFormation @antiquity.ac.uk
The Politics of Sacred Earth: How Ritual Platforms Helped Shape Early Chinese Identity
New excavations at Qianzhongzitou reveal that the roots of China’s unification lay not in imperial conquest, but in the politics of shared ritual and belonging.
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anthropology.net
Ancient teeth from Neolithic Syria reveal how the first farmers balanced rooted village life with mobility and inclusion—showing that even 10,000 years ago, belonging was chemical as much as cultural. #Archaeology #Neolithic #HumanOrigins #Anthropology www.anthropology.net/p/when-villa...
When Villages Became Home: How Ancient Teeth Reveal the Rise of Belonging in the First Farming Societies
New isotopic evidence from Neolithic Syria shows how early villagers built lasting ties to place, balanced mobility with inclusion, and began to define what it meant to belong.
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anthropology.net
Early South Americans weren’t just occasional hunters of giant sloths and mastodons—they depended on them. New evidence shows megafauna were dietary staples, sharpening debate over human-driven extinctions. #Archaeology #Anthropology #IceAge #Megafauna www.anthropology.net/p/when-giant...
When Giant Sloths Were Dinner: The Human Appetite That Helped End the Ice Age Giants
New evidence from Argentina, Chile, and Uruguay shows that early South Americans relied heavily on megafauna, reshaping the debate over human responsibility in Pleistocene extinctions.
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anthropology.net
New study of 7,000-year-old seeds in Germany shows Neolithic farmers expanded beyond einkorn & emmer, betting on barley & naked wheat to spread risk. Early agriculture was dynamic, not static. #Archaeology #Neolithic #Anthropology #FarmingHistory www.anthropology.net/p/when-farme...
When Farmers Gambled on Diversity: How Neolithic Communities in the Rhineland Transformed Their Fields
A new archaeobotanical study reveals how early European farmers shifted from einkorn and emmer to a more flexible, risk-spreading crop strategy nearly 7,000 years ago.
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primatology.net
We're heartbroken to share that Jane Goodall has died. She wasn't just a scientist; she was an iconoclast who showed the world that chimps have tool-making, complex emotions, and families... just like us.

#JaneGoodall #Chimpanzees #Conservation #RootsAndShoots #Legend
Jane Goodall, chimpanzee expert and animal rights campaigner, dies age 91 - follow live
The campaigner, a
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anthropology.net
Neanderthals thrived in the Ice Age not just through stocky bodies, but with fire, clothing, and high-calorie diets. New research shows cold survival was cultural, anatomical, and physiological. #Neanderthals #HumanEvolution #Anthropology www.anthropology.net/p/how-neande...
How Neanderthals Met the Ice Age on Every Front
New research shows that Homo neanderthalensis combined technology, anatomy, and physiology to withstand Ice Age extremes
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anthropology.net
2,500 years ago, Iberians carved myth into stone. At dawn on the solstice, a monolith’s shadow entered a rock womb—enacting a cosmic union of sun & earth. Fertility, power & time aligned. #Archaeology #Iberians #Anthropology www.anthropology.net/p/stones-of-...
Stones of Sun and Shadow: A Solstice Sanctuary in Iberia
How Iberian myths of fertility, death, and rebirth were carved into the land 2,500 years ago
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anthropology.net
12,000 years ago, desert dwellers in Arabia carved monumental camels into cliffs—signs of water, memory, and survival. Rock art was more than imagery; it was a lifeline. #Archaeology #Anthropology #HumanEvolution www.anthropology.net/p/how-monume...
How Monumental Art Helped Humans Thrive in Arabia’s Harshest Desert
Twelve-thousand-year-old engravings in northern Arabia reveal how early desert communities used monumental art to mark water, memory, and survival.
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anthropology.net
New fossil research shows humans reshaped mammal communities more than the Ice Age. Farming and livestock spread scrambled natural ecosystems, linking continents with the same domesticated animals. #Archaeology #Anthropology #HumanEvolution #Ecology www.anthropology.net/p/how-humans...
How Humans Rewired the Animal World
Fossil evidence shows that agriculture and domestication reshaped mammal communities more than the Ice Age extinctions
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