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Meet the 75,000-year-old Neanderthal woman whose friendly face is sparking a scientific debate
MSN News· 1 day agoFrom a flaky skull, found “as flat as a pizza” on a cave floor in northern Iraq, the face of a...
How A Human-Neanderthal Hybrid Child Rewrote Human History
IFLScience· 3 days agoUnlike any whippersnapper alive today, however, this extraordinary child exhibited a unique blend of...
Face of 75,000-year-old Neanderthal woman revealed by scientists who glued together 200 parts of her...
New York Post· 7 days agoThe face of a 75,000-year-old Neanderthal woman was reconstructed by a team of scientists in England...
Researchers reconstructed the face of a Neanderthal woman from 75,000 years ago
FOX 10 Phoenix· 3 days agoResearchers have recreated the face of a 75,000-year-old female Neanderthal after her skull was discovered during a 2018 excavation. Archaeologists and conservators from the ...
Meet Shanidar Z, a Neanderthal Woman Who Walked the Earth 75,000 Years Ago
Smithsonian Magazine· 4 days agoIn 2018, archaeologists unearthed the 75,000-year-old remains of a female Neanderthal from a cave in northern Iraq. Crushed by rocks and compacted by thousands of years of ...
Ancient Face Reconstructed: Meet Shanidar Z, the Neanderthal Woman
Gadgets 360· 3 days agoIn a groundbreaking archaeological endeavour, the face of a Neanderthal woman has been meticulously reconstructed from the shattered remnants of a skull unearthed in Iraqi ...
Scientists reveal the face of a Neanderthal who lived 75,000 years ago
AccuWeather· 7 days agoShanidar cave in Iraqi Kurdistan was first excavated in the 1950s. The remains of more than 10 Neanderthals have been found there. Known as Shanidar Z, after the cave in Iraqi ...
Orangutan Seen Treating A Wound With A Medicinal Plant In World-First, T. Rex May Have Been A “Smart...
IFLScience· 6 days agoThis week, the best preserved Neanderthal skeleton in over 25 years was discovered in a “funeral...
What the Origins of Humanity Can and Can’t Tell Us
The New Yorker· 4 days agoWhat we know today as Neanderthals might have been called Engisians or Gibraltarians, if remains of the same species that were dug up earlier in Engis, a municipality in Belgium ...
Was the Stone Age Actually the Wood Age?
New York Times· 6 days agoNeanderthals were even better craftsmen than thought, a new analysis of 300,000-year-old wooden tools has revealed. In 1836, Christian Jürgensen Thomsen, a Danish antiquarian ...