News
Europe faces existential threats. The only way to secure the continent’s future is for its individual countries to band ...
4dOpinion
Jacobin on MSNEurope’s Race to Remilitarize Isn’t Just About TrumpThere is an apparent paradox in Europe’s new militarized posture. On the one hand, the call to boost military spending has ...
As much fun as I had buying bargains in April, the fact that the S&P 500's earnings yield premium has dropped to a near two-decade low makes it much harder to find great stocks at attractive prices.
For the first time in over a decade, all five Great Lakes have slipped below their average water levels — a quiet but consequential marker in the escalating story of climate change. As of March ...
Mystery stone circle reveals ‘ultimate adventure story’ of human presence in Europe Early humans likely chose the site due to its good access to coastal and riverine resources Vishwam Sankaran ...
“The journey made by these pioneering people who left their lowland territories in mainland Europe to travel northwards into the unknown, is the ultimate adventure story,” Dr Hardy said.
The new study reflects an early human presence in the extreme northwest of Europe, pushing boundaries of survival in frigid conditions. Here, the early humans lived in a fragmented, fluctuating, and ...
The excavation site. (Jamie Booth via SWNS) By Elizabeth Hunter Evidence of one of the earliest human populations known in Scotland has been found, including tools and stone circles. Archaeologists ...
Scottish island reveals 11,000- year-old traces of earliest settlers ...
Stone circular structures in Scotland. (Jamie Booth via SWNS) By Elizabeth Hunter Evidence of one of the earliest human populations known in Scotland has been found, including tools and stone circles.
A team of archaeologists and scientists led by Karen Hardy, Professor of Prehistoric Archaeology at the University of Glasgow, has discovered evidence for one of the earliest human populations yet ...
A team of archaeologists and scientists led by Karen Hardy, Professor of Prehistoric Archaeology at the University of Glasgow, has discovered evidence for one of the earliest human populations yet ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results