Archives
11,500-year-old animal bones in Jordan suggest early dogs helped humans hunt
11,500 years ago in what is now northeast Jordan, people began to live alongside dogs and may also have used them for hunting, a new study from the University of Copenhagen shows. The archaeologists suggest that the introduction of dogs as hunting aids may explain the dramatic increase of hares and other small prey in the archaeological remains at the site.
Latest Research Articles
Climate change: Soil animals cannot explain self-reinforcing effect
Neuroscientists find first evidence animals can mentally replay past events
Stroke drug may also prevent Alzheimer's disease, say USC researchers
Epigenetic change causes fruit fly babies to inherit diet-induced heart disease
Food ads targeting black and Hispanic youth almost exclusively promote unhealthy products
Engineered T cells promote long-term organ transplant acceptance
Upper-ocean warming is changing the global wave climate, making waves stronger
Anticancer drug candidate inhibits lethal aggregation of mutant tumor suppressor protein
WSU smart home tests first elder care robot
New technique more precisely determines the ages of stars, Embry-Riddle researchers report
The orderly chaos of black holes
Giant pattern discovered in the clouds of planet Venus