In a cave in Poland, researchers have uncovered disturbing evidence of systematic cannibalism practiced by Magdalenian human groups. Unlike a survival act dictated by famine, this consumption of human ...
PORTLAND, Ore. (KATU) — Twenty-four-year-old Bailey is getting ready to pack up and move. Her tent sits on Southeast 165th Avenue, a stone’s throw from Division. She's been here a couple of ...
Researchers studied remains of 10 individuals from the Magdalenian culture who lived in Europe between 11,000 and 17,000 years ago. The bones had marks and cuts suggesting the removal of bone ...
Nicknamed the “Red Lady” due to her ochre-coated bones, she was a member of the Magdalenian people of the late Upper Paleolithic—people not so unlike us. “The results show that several ...
KHAO SAM ROI YOT NATIONAL PARK, THAILAND—Thai PBS World reports that Thailand’s Fine Arts Department announced an extraordinary discovery––the oldest human skeleton ever found in the country.
Ancient humans from the Magdalenian culture, who lived in Europe between 11,000 and 17,000 years ago, may have engaged in cannibalism as an act of war, according to a recent study.
The Magdalenian group, as they are called, may have extracted and consumed the brain of their dead enemies, suggests a new study that was published in Scientific Reports earlier this month. A team of ...
After hours: March 14 at 4:27:02 PM EDT Loading Chart for CAMP ...
For the study, published in Scientific Reports, scientists analysed remains from Maszycka Cave near Krakow, studying 10 individuals from Magdalenian group that lived over 18,000 yrs ago.
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