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How old is beer?

Humans are no strangers to kicking back with a cool pint of beer. The Ancient Egyptians, for example, had a hankering for beer that was a little bit tart, almost like a modern-day gose, a lemony beer from Germany. Homer, ...

Researchers decode oldest human DNA from South Africa to date

Researchers have reconstructed the oldest human genomes ever found in South Africa from two people who lived around 10,000 years ago, allowing a better understanding of how the region was populated, an author of the study ...

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Archaeology
The stone-eaters that threaten Iran's ancient Persepolis
Archaeology
'Ecocide' on Easter Island never took place, studies suggest
Archaeology
Was a lack of get-up-and-go the death of the Neanderthals?
Archaeology
Research reveals reality of puberty for Ice Age teens from 25,000 years ago
Archaeology
Wreck discovered of French steamship that sank in Atlantic in 1856
Archaeology
High-tech search for 1968 plane wreck in Michigan's Lake Superior shows nothing so far
Archaeology
Archaeologists discover an ancient Neanderthal lineage that remained isolated for over 50,000 years
Archaeology
Ancient DNA from Rapa Nui (Easter Island) refutes best-selling population collapse theory
Archaeology
Clovis people used Great Lakes camp annually about 13,000 years ago, researchers confirm
Archaeology
Archaeologists suggest Neolithic Scandinavians may have used skin boats to hunt, travel and trade
Archaeology
Stone Age mass grave contains mostly adult males who were related
Archaeology
Q&A: Looting of the Sudan National Museum—more is at stake than priceless ancient treasures
Archaeology
Archaeologists challenge theory of violent Steppe invasion in Iberia Peninsula
Archaeology
Archaeologists discover a likely place for Neanderthal and Homo sapiens interbreeding
Archaeology
Charcoal, ashes and coprolites: Latest findings shed light on the Neanderthals at Prado Vargas
Archaeology
Pottery sherds provide insight into the lives and trade networks of enslaved people in the Cayman Islands
Archaeology
Editorial: Rest assured, Ancient teens were full of existential angst too
Archaeology
The Roman siege of Masada lasted just a few weeks, not several years, say archaeologists
Archaeology
New population model identifies phases of human dispersal across Europe
Archaeology
Five lessons from ancient civilizations for keeping homes cool in hot, dry climates

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Planetary Sciences
Ryugu samples call into question previous ideas about the formation of carbon-rich asteroids
Analytical Chemistry
High-energy-density cubic gauche nitrogen successfully synthesized at atmospheric pressure
Earth Sciences
Marine dust identifies 1.5 million year Oldest Ice near South America
Plants & Animals
Forest loss forces langur species to interbreed, study shows
Optics & Photonics
Research team succeeds in ultra-fast switching of tiny light sources
Bio & Medicine
Bioengineers and chemists design fluorescent 3D-printed structures with potential medical applications
Plants & Animals
Scientists use drones to track white sharks along California beaches
General Physics
From branches to loops: The physics of transport networks in nature
Environment
Enhancing hurricane forecasts: Simulations reveal reducing estimates of atmospheric friction improves storm predictions
Optics & Photonics
Nonlinear optical metasurface achieves electrically tunable third-harmonic generation
Evolution
Seal species carries 'genetic scars' after being hunted to the edge of extinction, new research reveals
Analytical Chemistry
Chemical engineers provide new insights in CO₂ conversion with electricity
Biochemistry
Fruit juice offers a fresh take on kombucha
General Physics
Smashing heavy ions together could produce the world's strongest electric fields
Cell & Microbiology
How a protein keeps gene clusters quiet in the cell nucleolus
General Physics
Accelerator lab provides detailed data on the 'magic' N=50 neutron shell closure
Nanophysics
Researchers crack a key problem with sodium-ion batteries for electric vehicles and grid energy storage
Earth Sciences
Ancient buried log offers evidence of biomass vaults as cheap way to store climate-warming carbon
Planetary Sciences
Study suggests moon may have been captured from space rather than formed from collision particles
Plants & Animals
Marine debris removal benefits Hawaiian monk seals and ecosystems

RIP Stoneman Willie: US mummy buried after 128 years

After more than a century living with a macabre mystery, the US town of Reading, Pennsylvania closed the casket Saturday on its oddest-ever resident—a mummified man who was finally buried.

Oldest evidence of human cannibalism as a funerary practice

The remains of human bones with cutmarks, breaks and human chewing marks found across northern Europe show that some human groups living around 15,000 years ago were eating their dead not out of necessity, but as part of ...