Ancient glyphs and cave art push back Homo sapiens’ timeline, showing early symbolic thinking and complex planning 40,000+ years ago.
Recent discoveries include fossils from Casablanca that shed light on early human evolution, and dinosaur bones showing violent mating behaviors. These findings fill key gaps in our understanding of prehistoric life, highlighting complex behaviors and evolutionary links between species, with dates ranging from 773,000 years ago to 66 million years ago.
Archaeologists at Wandlebury Country Park near Cambridge uncovered remains dating from around the ninth century AD, including 10 human skeletons, some tied or dismembered, possibly linked to Viking-Saxon conflicts. The find includes a tall man with evidence of ancient surgery, and the site may relate to historical violence or ritual practices.