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Researchers discovered tools dating as far back as 11,500 years. The tools could be evidence of the earliest human settlement ...
The findings give a glimpse of how far north humans traveled during the Paleolithic Age. The post Evidence of earliest human ...
A team of archaeologists and scientists led by Karen Hardy, Professor of Prehistoric Archaeology at the University of Glasgow ...
The evidence was discovered on the Isle of Skye and point to one of the ... of north-west Scotland.” The team included people from the universities of Leeds, Sheffield, Leeds Beckett and ...
A group of archaeologists and scientists, led by Professor Karen Hardy from the University of Glasgow, has discovered ...
Stone tools discovered by a team of archaeologists and scientists from the University of Glasgow are believed to date back to ...
Paleontologists have discovered tracks belonging to meat-eating theropods and long-necked sauropods on the Isle of Skye.
New dinosaur fossil tracks on the Isle of Skye reveal that the once-balmy environment was home to both fierce theropods and massive sauropods.
Skye is the largest of the Inner Hebrides. It covers an area of ​​1,656 square kilometers and has a population of around ...
This article is brought to you by our exclusive subscriber partnership with our sister title USA Today, and has been written by our American colleagues. It does not necessarily reflect the view of ...
Upon reaching Skye, the early people created tools from stone they ... A likely Ahrensburgian presence in the far north of the Isle of Skye, Scotland'. The paper concludes by stating: "While ...