A Cave in France Changes What We Thought We Knew About Neanderthals
Seychelles EU Connection :: Anthropology :: Seychelles EU community duty, role responsibility to promote gondwana land Anthropological debate, research and issues
Page 1 of 1
A Cave in France Changes What We Thought We Knew About Neanderthals
A Cave in France Changes What We Thought We Knew About Neanderthals
A cave in France contains man’s earliest-known structures that had to be built by Neanderthals who were believed to be incapable of such things.
https://bigthink.com/robby-berman/a-cave-in-france-changes-what-we-thought-we-knew-about-neanderthals
A cave in France contains man’s earliest-known structures that had to be built by Neanderthals who were believed to be incapable of such things.
https://bigthink.com/robby-berman/a-cave-in-france-changes-what-we-thought-we-knew-about-neanderthals
Sirop14- Posts : 26733
Join date : 2008-06-02
Similar topics
» Humans and Neanderthals 'co-existed in Europe for far longer than thought'
» Neanderthals and humans coexisted for up to 2,900 years in France and Spain
» Did interbreeding wipe out the Neanderthals? Scientists say extinct species mated with humans – and were NOT killed off by them
» Cave girl's mum and dad were from different ancient human species
» Mancham invited to join prestigious ‘Club de Madrid’
» Neanderthals and humans coexisted for up to 2,900 years in France and Spain
» Did interbreeding wipe out the Neanderthals? Scientists say extinct species mated with humans – and were NOT killed off by them
» Cave girl's mum and dad were from different ancient human species
» Mancham invited to join prestigious ‘Club de Madrid’
Seychelles EU Connection :: Anthropology :: Seychelles EU community duty, role responsibility to promote gondwana land Anthropological debate, research and issues
Page 1 of 1
Permissions in this forum:
You cannot reply to topics in this forum
|
|