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Discover Magazine on MSNPrehistoric Human Populations Shifted East at the End of the Ice AgeTraveling East might have been an appropriate tendency for early humans living in what is now Europe near the end of the Ice Age. A team of researchers describe how populations shifted in size, ...
Volcanoes. A short video for 11-14 year old pupils, exploring tectonic activity and volcanoes and featuring case studies from ...
This Tuesday, 1st April, in the south-west of Iceland, the volcano Sundhnúkagígar erupted, resulting in a massive fissure in ...
An archaeological study of human settlement during the Final Palaeolithic revealed that populations in Europe did not decrease homogenously during the last cold phase of the Ice Age. Significant ...
The map shows population shifts from the south-western to the north-eastern Europe during the last cold phase of the Ice Age.
Earthquakes and massive cracks have severely damaged Grindavik, a fishing town that once housed around 1% of Iceland’s ...
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