News

Ancient Andean burial mounds reveal early hunter-gatherer roots of monumental architecture by Greg Watry, UC Davis edited by Robert Egan Editors' notes ...
The Margaux woman was a hunter-gatherer who lived and roamed Europe 10,500 years ... They used animal parts for clothing, tools, and bindings, and may have domesticated dogs. 'Their lifestyle was ...
People coming from the north settled South America. The first hunter-gatherers entered the continent from the region of what is Colombia today and then spread out from there. An international ...
The former Hunter-Gatherer brewery building on Columbia's Main Street will be deconstructed to make way for new development. The brewery closed in 2024.
Historic Columbia and the University of South Carolina Foundation are partnering on the careful deconstruction of the Hunter-Gatherer building at 900 Main St.
Prehistoric hunter-gatherers were likely skilled seafarers who could make long and challenging journeys. Stone tools, animal bones and other artifacts unearthed in Malta indicate that humans first ...
Evidence reveals that people reached Malta 8,500 years ago. Hunter-gatherers made the long trip there 1,000 years before agricultural societies arrived.
VIENNA, AUSTRIA—According to a Live Science report, European hunter-gatherers traversed the Mediterranean Sea in primitive boats and visited North Africa much earlier than previously thought. A ...
Ancient hunter-gatherers from Europe may have voyaged across the Mediterranean to Northern Africa around 8,500 years ago, new research suggests. Ancient DNA collected from the remains of Stone Age ...
Patrons enjoy dinner and drinks at Hunter Gatherer in Columbia on Thursday Dec. 12, 2024. Hunter Gatherer opened in 1995 as Columbia’s first microbrewery. It will close at the end of December.
Archaeological evidence from the world-famous Mesolithic site of Star Carr in North Yorkshire has shown that hunter-gatherers likely kept an orderly home by creating ‘zones’ for particular ...