Ancient Stone Tools in Brazil Were Made by Capuchin Monkeys, Not Humans - New Study A new study claims that ancient stone tools were made by capuchin monkeys and not by early Americans. by Jace Dela Cruz
Science Scientists Have No Idea What These Ornately Carved Baseball-Sized Neolithic Stone Balls Are For by Nicole Arce
Science Study Reveals Not Much Has Changed In Genetics Between Stone, Modern Age Populations In East Asia by Dianne Depra
Science World's Earliest Farmers Originated From Diverse Group In The Fertile Crescent by Alyssa Navarro
Science Fragment Of World's Oldest Stone Axe Reveals Cutting-Edge Technology From Prehistoric Ancestors by Alyssa Navarro
Science Oh Deer - Did Early Humans Bring Animals to Scotland From Europe 5,000 Years Ago? by James Maynard
Science Stone Age Massacre In Kenya Earliest Evidence Of Warfare: Prehistoric Mass Murder Shows Attack Common Among Hunter Gatherers by Rhodi Lee
Science Humans Exploited Labor Of Honeybees 9000 Years Ago: What This Reveals About Stone Age People by Julienne Roman
Science Stone Age Farmers 9,000 Years Ago May Have Been The First Beekeepers, Researchers Discover by Jim Algar
Science Stone Age Axes Show Evidence Of Early Humans Using High-Level Cognitive Functions by Jim Algar
Science Discovery of 5,000-Year-Old Human Footprints in Denmark Shed Light on Life of Stone Age Fishermen by James Maynard
Science Experts Unearth Ancient Footprints in Denmark, Give Clues How Humans Live Near the Sea by Anu Passary
Science Stone Age tools did not originate from Africa, toolmaking skills developed independently worldwide by Rhodi Lee
Science Genetic study reveals how farmers took over hunters during the Stone Age by Alexander Saltarin