A stunning discovery in southwest China has uncovered 50,000-year-old tools that challenge our understanding of human evolution.
Researchers found European-style Quina tools in China, dating back 55,000 years, challenging the view that East Asia’s Middle ...
The tools, crafted using Quina method – a technique used by Neanderthals – have been found an archaeological site in ...
From prehistoric paths dating back to the Neolithic period to walking routes used by Buddhist monks and tea merchants, these trails offer much more than a scenic walk in nature.
From prehistoric paths dating back to the Neolithic period to walking routes used by Buddhist monks and tea merchants, these ...
Archaeologists in China’s Yunnan province unearthed stone tools crafted in a style associated with Neanderthals that hasn’t ...
New technologies today often involve electronic devices that are smaller and smarter than before. During the Middle Paleolithic, when Neanderthals were modern humans' neighbors, new technologies meant ...
Another groundbreaking discovery that Wei doesn't want visitors to miss is the evidence of a culture that processed ochre, ...
The tool we've identified is called a Quina scraper. This type of stone tool is well known from archaeological sites in ...
Discovery in China of tools called Quina scrapers suggests the people of East Asia were as inventive and flexible with ...
There are also many miniature wooden farm animals and tools once used as funerary objects — evidence of the thriving ...