Chemical traces on 60,000-year-old stone arrowheads from South Africa suggest ancient hunters used plant poison.
Thanks to genetic science, gene editing, and techniques like cloning, it’s now possible to move DNA through time, studying ...
In the recent study on pain, researchers investigated three variations in the SCN9A gene, and reported greater pain ...
As technology accelerates progress, a paradox emerges: digital nomadism is unraveling humanity back to its hunter-gatherer ...
A rapid climate collapse during the Late Ordovician Mass Extinction devastated ocean life and reshuffled Earth’s ecosystems.
Debuting February 3 at Eclipso NYC in the heart of Manhattan, Colosseum The Legendary Arena reinforces New York City as ...
Marc Benioff’s recommended books reveal how leadership, ethics, strategy, and spirituality come together to shape modern ...
Fourteen million — that’s how many digital checkouts the Toronto Public Library logged last year. It’s a record number for ...
AHMEDABAD: Dwarka, the ancient coastal town closely associated with the legend of Lord Krishna and home to the revered ...
Earliest evidence of poisoned arrows offers new insights into the advanced technology and strategic thinking of prehistoric ...
Altogether, they reconstructed 11 ancient herpesvirus genomes. The oldest came from a young girl found in southern Italy who ...
New chemical analysis of quartz microliths from South Africa confirms that humans were skilled with poison long ago.
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