Surviving a "bone-breaking" fever and life-threatening storms, York's Barry Snaith, 87, has written a memoir of his three-year ...
So much has changed in Liverpool through the decades, from how we shop, dress and socialise to the nightclubs and popular ...
Bone artifacts discovered in Tanzania push back the earliest known date of bone tool technology by over a million years. In ...
Learn more about the earliest "factory" of bone tools ever discovered, which saw the systematic shaping of bone some 1 million years before other such "factories." ...
The bone tools date from more than a million years before our species, Homo sapiens, arose around 300,000 years ago.
These are the oldest mass-produced bone tools ever found, pushing back the timeline by a staggering one million years.