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Ice Age cave find upends what we know about Australia’s first people - Glacier landscapes may not have been hurdles for early ...
Archaeologists from the Australian Museum, the University of Sydney and The Australian National University (ANU), in ...
Beneath the thick ice of East Antarctica lies a hidden world—untouched for over 34 million years. This frozen expanse, more ...
Animals we still see today, like shrews, mice, and lemmings, survived despite the changing landscape. Megafauna reigned supreme during the ice age. We don’t know for sure why prehistoric animals ...
Some 50,000 years ago Southern California was largely a cool, wet woodlands, but by the end of the Ice Age around 11,000 years ago, the landscape had shifted to a dryer, more open area of shrubby ...
Long before the Great Lakes came to define the heart of North America, a much larger lake once ruled the land. Lake Agassiz, ...
Antarctica wasn’t always a desolate icescape. International researchers announced the discovery of an over ...
After the Ice Age, Flume Brook began to flow through the ... According to Keller, sometimes glaciers greatly shape the landscape below, other times not as much. The key is in what’s happening ...
interior areas of South Africa that are now arid and inhospitable were more fertile and temperate for longer periods of time during the Ice Ages than previously thought. Archaeologist Brian ...
Dr Matt Pope, UCL Institute of Archaeology, said: “The excavations at the Maritime Academy have given us an incredibly valuable opportunity to study how an entire Ice Age landscape developed ...
While digging into sediment thought to have been part of a tributary of the River Medway from the Middle Pleistocene age, a treasure ... to study how an entire Ice Age landscape developed over ...
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