Newstral
Article
The Globe and Mail on 2017-03-09 14:31
Ancient dental plaque shows Neanderthals used plants to cope with pain
Related news
- Paleo diet revamped? Prehistoric plaque reveals what Neanderthals ate.csmonitor.com
- Paleo diet revised? Prehistoric plaque reveals what Neanderthals ate.csmonitor.com
- The real paleo diet? Prehistoric plaque reveals what Neanderthals ate.csmonitor.com
- Sex, disease, and extinction: what ancient DNA tells us about humans and NeanderthalsThe Verge
- Ancient DNA from Spain’s ‘pit of bones’ could reveal the origin of Neanderthalsnews.nationalpost.com
- Study confirms ancient Spanish cave art was made by Neanderthalstimesofmalta.com
- Ancient Tooth Plaque Divulges Neanderthal's Surprisingly Diverse Dietsgizmodo.com
- Ancient humans may have been mothers to some Neanderthals earlier than we thoughtThe Verge
- Ancient DNA from Spain's 'pit of bones' could reveal the origin of NeanderthalsSydney Morning Herald
- The work of Neanderthals: Ancient ring-like structures from 176,000 years agoLA Times
- Israeli researchers on the Paleo diet: Neanderthals ate plants as well as meatThe Jerusalem Post (JPost.com)
- Gardening: Misting can help plants cope in scorching-hot weatherocregister.com
- At last, scientists show Neanderthals some loveThe Japan Times
- The Week Unwrapped: Pay cheques, sporting pressure and ancient plantstheweek.co.uk
- Chinese landscape architect plants ancient solutions to a modern dilemmaSydney Morning Herald
- Neanderthals Could Make Fire, New Study SuggestsHaaretz
- Early Europeans interbred with Neanderthals: studyThe Japan Times
- Humans started having sex with Neanderthals over 100,000 years agoArs Technica
- Neanderthals may have self-medicated long before pillsCNN