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East Asian Paleolithic voyagers may have used dugout canoes to cross one of the strongest currents in the world.
Japanese researchers turned to “experimental archaeology” to study how ancient humans navigated powerful ocean currents and migrated offshore.
Scientists have made a haunting and oddly poetic discovery that shows that even tens of millions of years ago, life — and ...
The large fish, spanning nearly a metre on the lake bed, lived in waters thick with rival fish, including giants several ...
A 92-year-old man believed he would never have to answer for raping and murdering a widow in her home almost 58 years ago, prosecutors have alleged. Louisa Dunne, 75, who had been twice widowed and ...
In a market increasingly dominated by algorithms and machine learning, understanding AI-driven trading systems isn’t enough.
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New Scientist on MSNAncient mammoth-tusk boomerang is twice as old as we thoughtA boomerang discovered in a Polish cave was originally dated as 18,000 years old, but it may have been contaminated by ...
The shift from lizard-like sprawl to upright walking in mammals wasn’t a smooth climb up the evolutionary ladder. Instead, it ...
The finished dugout canoe before departure, with leaf wave guards at the bow (right) and stern (left). Vertical sticks at bow ...
Researchers determined that footprints in White Sands National Park in New Mexico are from the oldest migrants to North ...
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