About 170 years ago, a large bundle of stone tools was deliberately buried close to a waterhole in the remote Australian ...
Researchers excavating at a site in northern Tanzania’s Olduvai Gorge have unearthed bone implements made by human ancestors 1.5 million years ago. This is around a million years earlier than scholars ...
Ailsa Chang speaks with David Braun, an archeologist, about his team's discovery of a site in Kenya that suggests human ancestors built tools continuously much earlier than previously thought.
Stone tool analysis of sites in Southeast Asia provided evidence that the area was a technological leader in seafaring. Archaeology supports that 40,000 years ago, the people living in Southeast Asia ...
At a site in Kenya, archaeologists recently unearthed layer upon layer of stone stools from deposits that span 300,000 years, and include a period of intense environmental upheaval. The oldest tools ...
The research is evidence that long-term stability in a technology does not necessarily indicate stagnation. In fact, it may reveal a powerful fit between a working tool and the challenges of daily ...
Imagine early humans meticulously crafting stone tools for nearly 300,000 years, all while contending with recurring wildfires, droughts, and dramatic environmental shifts. A study published in Nature ...
Someone born near the start of the 20th century could have witnessed the dawn of commercial flight, the creation of nuclear weapons, the moon landing and even the early growth of the internet.
Archaeologists have discovered evidence of a now-submerged land bridge along Turkey's Aegean coast that may have served as a crucial pathway for early human migration from Asia to Europe during the ...
From time to time, I’ll sit on a product call where a vendor pitches software or some other IT product. Recent pitches include many AI-enabled tools, following current tech trends. But I often wonder ...
QUANZHOU, FUJIAN, CHINA, September 29, 2025 /EINPresswire.com/ -- The stone processing industry demands precision equipment that can transform raw materials into ...
The Aurora Police Department wants to add facial recognition software to its crime-fighting toolkit. The technology, already used in other Colorado cities, has long been controversial. Civil rights ...