Picture of wild pig made at least 45,500 years ago provides earliest evidence of human settlement
![Image](https://i.guim.co.uk/img/media/5189fb1648c5880a5414e65b1b8163374d268cc4/0_260_5472_3282/master/5472.jpg?width=620&quality=85&auto=format&fit=max&s=d4c67250dafeae6cc7560ccd60f84496)
https://www.theguardian.com/science/202 ... SApp_Other
Scientists Have Described The Butt Orifice Of A Dinosaur For the first TimeThis cloaca is more than 100 million years old, and it did a lot of work for this extinct species.
A dinosaur's butthole was a Swiss Army knife of orifices“All-purpose dinosaur opening”
https://www.iflscience.com/plants-and-a ... irst-time/
https://twitter.com/TheCut/status/13527 ... 52576?s=20Reconstructing a dino's cloaca gives scientists a new perspective
https://www.cbc.ca/radio/quirks/jan-23- ... -1.5882552
Barlow writes in “Haunting the Wild Avocado,” originally published in Biodversity:
The identities of the dispersers shifted every few million years, but from an avocado’s perspective, a big mouth is a big mouth and a friendly gut is a friendly gut. The passage of a trifling 13,000 years (since the Pleistocene extinction) is too soon to exhaust the patience of genus Persea. The genes that shape fruits ideal for megafauna retain a powerful memory of an extraordinary mutualistic relationship.
in conclusion, the avocado, originally named with the aztec word for testicles, may have had it's seed excreted from a dinosaur buttholeEcologist Dan Janzen conducted groundbreaking research on these and other “anachronistic fruits” and found that the avocado isn’t alone in this regard. His research in the late ’70s in the neotropics— an ecozone that includes both Americas and the entire South American temperate zone—sparked a shift in ecological thinking regarding these evolutionary-stunted fruits. Other examples include: papaya, cherimoya, sapote and countless other fleshy fruits of the neotropics. Another surprising “ghost” you may see everyday: Honey locust pods scattered about your driveway. All of these fruits are not considered edible by most native mammalian standards today. Barlow continues:
“In 1977, however, was beginning to suspect that he—along with every other ecologist working with large tropical fruits of the New World—had been wrong in one very big way. They all had failed to see that some fruits are adapted primarily for animals that have been extinct for 13,000 years.”
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Langweil% ... _of_Prague
Langweil's Model of Prague is a realistic paper model of Prague dating from 1826–1837 and named after its creator Antonín Langweil. Due to Langweil's early death, the model remained unfinished. It covers an area of 20 m2 and shows more than 2,000 buildings in the historic heart of Prague in fine detail; approximately half of them do not exist anymore.
https://youtu.be/T3rXhIpiZuAmore than 9,000 chimneys
Oldest melody:The haunting Song of Seikilos is the oldest complete musical composition in existence and was engraved on a tombstone in the town of Tralles near modern-day Aydin in Turkey.
The text says:
While you live, shine
have no grief at all
life exists only for a short while
and time demands an end.
And is signed from Seikilos to Euterpe – probably his wife.
/google translated/
An amateur metal detector found the grave of a probably Soviet soldier from the end of the Second World War among the vineyards in Kostice in the Břeclav region. Since there was also a hand grenade in the grave, he called police pyrotechnics to the site and they also contacted the archaeologist.
The archaeologist did not find anything on the site that would allow the person to be identified. "According to the equipment, it should be a Russian soldier, his skeleton will still be examined by an anthropologist," said archaeologist Libor Kalčík from the Břeclav Museum.
In addition to a Soviet-made hand grenade that police pyrotechnicians took for disposal, the grave also contained one and a half kilograms of ammunition, a helmet, a gas mask, boots, and a pendant with a picture of a saint. The weapon was not stored in the grave.
"About some objects, we do not yet know what they are, and they will be the subject of further research. So far, it appears that the soldier died after a gunshot wound and was buried by his friends. The grave was not deep at all, but it was obviously deliberately dug," Kalčík described. As it is a war grave, its finding will be reported to the authorities and the Russian side.
https://archaeologynewsnetwork.blogspot ... ns-in.html
Foxes Were Domesticated By Humans In The Bronze Age
In the northeast of the Iberian Peninsula, between the third and second millennium BC, a widespread funeral practice consisted in burying humans with animals. Scientists have discovered that both foxes and dogs were domesticated, as their diet was similar to that of their owners.
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Female burial of Minferri with a goat and two foxes. The woman embraces a female fox
The Piltdown Man fraud significantly affected early research on human evolution. Notably, it led scientists down a blind alley in the belief that the human brain expanded in size before the jaw adapted to new types of food.
https://www.heritagedaily.com/2021/04/s ... ves/138552
Stone Age Humans Got “Stoned” in Caves
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In a new study published in the Journal of Archaeology, Consciousness and Culture, archaeologists have been conducting studies on the effects of smoke and poor air circulation on humans whilst inside palaeolithic caves and rock shelters.
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Various caves in France contain cave paintings deep inside the cave interior, which has led to the researchers investigating the possibility that humans penetrated further into caves where the lower concentration of oxygen could lead to hypoxia.
Hypoxia is a condition in which the body or a region of the body is deprived of adequate oxygen in environments where the oxygen concentration stands below 18%.
The study found that a combination of the enclosed environment, limited air circulation, and the use of fire to illuminate a cave led to a rapid decrease in oxygen as low as 11%.
Humans can survive in environments as low as 9%, but If oxygen delivery to cells is insufficient due to rapid onset of hypoxia, subjects can suffer symptoms such as headaches, confusion, disorientation, hallucinations, behavioural change, severe headaches, a reduced level of consciousness, and a sense of euphoria like a drug.
The researchers also suggest that the altered mindset would have affected their cognitive abilities to draw in the caves.
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