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Human Migration

View of the submerged stone bridge from Genovesa Cave, Mallorca, Spain. Credit R. Landreth

Ancient Bridge Discovery Reveals Earlier Human Settlement in Western Mediterranean

A computer-generated image (3D rendering) shows what the scene of a possible butchering event might have looked like in the past. This image is based on the work of a paleoartist who studied real fossils. The artist used the size and shape of the fossils to create 3D models of the animals and their environment. Then, they used special computer techniques (3D digital scanning and texturing by projection) to add details and textures to the models, making the scene look realistic.

Giant Armadillos Butchered in Argentina 21,000 Years Ago

The infographic illustrates the probable routes taken by the first human migrants across Eurasia and the Americas. These routes are estimated using a combination of archaeological and genetic data. The colored areas represent different types of ecosystems encountered, determined by climate and vegetation models. The inset image shows ideal migration conditions: warm, humid areas with a mix of forests and grasslands near rivers.

How Ancient Landscapes Guided Early Human Migration Out of Africa

Skull of one of the mysterious backtrackers

Ancient Siberian population migrated back from North America

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