Archaeology
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		OceansUnderwater city was built by microbes, not people
Submerged stoneworklike formations near the Greek island of Zakynthos were built by methane-munching microbes, not ancient Greeks.
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		ArchaeologyAncient Europeans may have been first wine makers
A new chemical analysis uncovers the earliest known wine making in Europe.
By Bruce Bower - 			
			
		ArchaeologyLidar maps vast network of Cambodia’s hidden cities
Laser survey unveils the extent, and the mystery, of Southeast Asia’s Khmer Empire
By Bruce Bower - 			
			
		GeneticsAncient DNA tells of two origins for dogs
Genetic analysis of an ancient Irish mutt reveals complicated history of dog domestication.
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		ArchaeologyEarliest evidence of fire making in Europe found
Clues to Stone Age fire making surface in a Spanish cave.
By Bruce Bower - 			
			
		ArchaeologyStone circles show Neandertals’ social, technical skills
Ancient human relatives built circular stalagmite structures inside a French cave.
By Bruce Bower - 			
			
		ArchaeologyEvidence of 5,000-year-old beer recipe found in China
Ancient brewer’s toolkits put barley on tap in China as early as 3400 B.C.
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		Anthropology‘Slam-dunk’ find puts hunter-gatherers in Florida 14,500 years ago
Finds at an underwater site put people in Florida a surprisingly long time ago.
By Bruce Bower - 			
			
		AnimalsHistory of road-tripping shaped camel DNA
Centuries of caravan domestication and travel left some metaphorical tire marks on Arabian camel genes, researchers find.
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		ArchaeologyLasers unveil secrets and mysteries of Angkor Wat
The world’s largest temple, Cambodia’s Angkor Wat, was revealed by laser and radar studies to be part of a sprawling medieval metropolis.
By Bruce Bower - 			
			
		ArchaeologyBear bone rewrites human history in Ireland
A rediscovered bear bone puts humans in Ireland at least 12,600 years ago.
By Bruce Bower - 			
			
		AnthropologyBelize cave was Maya child sacrifice site
Bones in Central American cave suggest many Maya sacrificial victims were children.
By Bruce Bower