News

A new study sheds light on how prehistoric hunter-gatherer populations in Europe coped with climate changes over 12,000 years ago. Led by scientists from the University of Cologne, a team of 25 ...
Against the backdrop of a rapidly warming planet, the need to better understand the nature and long-term impact of positive climatic feedback loops — ...
An Instagram post says, "Climate change is a naturally occurring phenomenon that can be tracked throughout prehistoric eras." Earth’s climate has naturally changed in the past, partly because of ...
Even so, Dr. Scotese questioned whether the researchers’ hotter account of prehistoric Earth squared with other evidence about what the planet was like back then.
With climate change threatening the planet’s future, a UB-led research team is looking to the past for answers. ... Within the chemical makeup of this stuff is crucial information about the region’s ...
UB scientists have received more than $2.9 million from the National Science Foundation to study the impacts of prehistoric climate change on ecosystems in Southeast Alaska. This coastal region “holds ...
Imagine Wyoming 12,000 years ago: The ice age is over, and it’s warming up for the Holocene. Prehistoric hunters and gatherers inhabit the area. Just like today, there are alpine lakes in the Rocky ...
The remains include a prehistoric settlement, a potential early medieval building and Roman-era artifacts, National Highways, a U.K.-government-owned body, in collaboration with the Oxford ...
Eyed needles, which began appearing around 40,000 years ago, served a purpose beyond tailoring for prehistoric humans, a new study has found. They were also instruments of self-expression.