News

New archaeological finds in Malta add to an emerging theory that early Stone Age humans cruised the open seas.
Archaeologists find evidence that hunter-gatherers crossed over 100 kilometers of open sea to reach Malta 8,500 years ago.
New archaeological discoveries from Malta suggest that prehistoric hunter-gatherers were far more capable oflong-distance sea ...
The team made the daily climb with all their excavation and photography equipment, weighing up to 50 pounds per person.
A groundbreaking study led by Bar-Ilan University reveals that starch-rich plants played a central role in the diet of ancient hunter-gatherers. A new archaeological study along the Jordan River, just ...
A new archaeological investigation led by the University of Cologne has revealed how hunter-gatherer populations in Europe faced ... of human adaptation in times of crisis. During the Late Paleolithic ...
Ice Age climate shifts triggered major population changes in prehistoric Europe through migration and adaptation.
This week was an exciting one for any people with a love for Malta’s history. It’s rare that we get to see history be changed before our very eyes, but a discovery in Mellieha by a ...
This transition led to progress in human societies. Researchers from the University of Bath, the Max Planck Institute for ...