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Wet cooking and pit steaming allowed for high extraction rates without damaging the teeth, also cooking the meat to make it ...
A pioneering study in experimental archaeology has revealed the techniques used by prehistoric communities in north-eastern ...
Prehistoric people used a culinary method, similar to slow cooking today, to carefully extract animal teeth to use in ...
Such artefacts have been recovered in and around Scandinavia from the Stone Age into the Bronze Age, indicating that animal skin boats were likely well-known and in use in the region. open image ...
Emmerich Kamper crafted a speculatively Paleolithic-style skin canoe for the show Surviving the Stone Age, but she'd only used it on short jaunts. If they took animal skin boats on a multi-day ...
Nillson studied historic migration patterns to determine that the woman likely had light skin and dark hair. She is clothed in tanned animal skins made with Stone Age techniques. Photograph by ...
“On the contrary, in these locations, the skin is much closer to the bones, which makes marking the bone inevitable when skinning an animal.” The Schöningen site in Germany is most famous for ...
300,000-year-old cave markings in Germany suggest Stone Age humans were wearing clothes ... to indicate that humans in Europe skinned the animals, a new study found. The markings were found ...
The study, led by Archaeologist Tuija Kirkinen, was aimed at investigating how these highly degraded plant- and animal-based materials could be traced through soil analysis. During the Stone Age ...
They also appear to have been an important animal tracking tool. In present-day Namibia, prehistoric peoples from the Late Stone Age put so much detail into their engravings of human and animal ...
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