Scientists have discovered that the first Australians lived alongside 600-pound kangaroos and car-sized lizards. "These ...
“The animal parts left at Clovis sites are dominated by megafauna, and the projectile points are large, affixed to darts, ...
A new and improved model of Thylacoleo carnifex, Australia’s ancient marsupial lion, is now on display at the Naracoorte ...
This discovery sheds new light on the survival strategies of ancient humans and their impact on the environment.
The world’s most famous grizzly, Bear 399, met her end on the evening of October 22, the victim of a car hurtling through ...
New research examines chemical signatures to determine the diet of a prehistoric boy and his mother, suggesting the Clovis ...
The WISDAM app uses aerial survey data to standardise the image review process and map animal detections to real-world ...
Isotopic data gave researchers the first direct evidence that the Clovis people focused on hunting large animals.
Clovis people relied heavily on mammoths, using advanced hunting skills for food and expansion. Mammoths formed 40% of their ...
They discovered that her diet was mostly meat from megafauna - the largest animals in an ecosystem - with an emphasis on mammoths. Megafauna made up about 96% of her diet, with mammoths comprising ...
The remains of the ancient 18-month-old male child, who was the subject of the study, was accidentally unearthed near Wilsall in 1968.
Mammoths weren’t the only large animals, called megafauna, that disappeared around the same time. Giant sloths, weighing more than 3,000 pounds, short-faced bears and the dire wolf also could ...