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If you've ever wondered how farming spread far and wide, our research on past human societies offers one explanation: contact ...
Nuclear sabre-rattling is back after a peaceful intermission. Following a serious attack on Ukraine, Russia’s Security Council Secretary Sergei Shoigu said that ...
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The Times of Israel on MSNIsraeli study finds burst of fires 8,000 years ago forced humans to become farmersHebrew University researcher says lightning-ignited blazes transformed Levant's landscape, ending hunter-gatherer lifestyle ...
Scholars have long debated whether human activity or climatic factors prompted the Neolithic Revolution, the transition from ...
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The Star on MSNDebate over colonial benefit to rural KenyaIn continuing to review Nicholas Rankin’s ‘Trapped in History: Kenya, Mau Mau and Me’, there is the question of the good and the bad of British rule, with education already highlighted among the ...
From the eating habits of nomadic early humans to the industrial revolution era, how we eat has been shaped by time, ...
From a former convent supporting carers in Canada to seductive new suites on regenerative farmland in Devon, these ...
Göbekli Tepe, a 7,000-year-older site than the Egyptian pyramids, is the world’s oldest monumental structure, offering a new ...
A major new study is changing how we understand one of the biggest turning points in human history: the shift from hunting ...
The prevalence of seagrass throughout human civilisation has fostered spiritual and cultural relations with these underwater ...
Inequality, it turns out, is not a natural outcome of agriculture or societal progress but it is a consequence of deliberate choices by those in power.
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