Topic: Time » Eras » Historic Eras » Prehistoric Eras » Stone Age

Stone Age

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Homo heidelbergensis sculpture

Sculpting Evolution

A series of statues by sculptor John Gurche brings us face to face with our early ancestors
March 2010 | By Abigail Tucker

Neanderthal burial scene

The Skeletons of Shanidar Cave

A rare cache of hominid fossils from the Kurdistan area of northern Iraq offers a window on Neanderthal culture
March 2010 | By Owen Edwards

Semir Osmanagic

The Mystery of Bosnia's Ancient Pyramids

An amateur archaeologist says he's discovered the world's oldest pyramids in the Balkans. But many experts remain dubious
December 2009 | By Colin Woodard

Dogon region villager with ritual figures

Looting Mali's History

As demand for its antiquities soars, the West African country is losing its most prized artifacts to illegal sellers and smugglers
November 2009 | By Joshua Hammer

Mary Leakey Australopithecus boisei

Hominids’ African Origins, 50 Years Later

Before Mary Leakey’s discovery of hominid fossils in East Africa, many experts thought that human ancestors evolved in Asia
July 23, 2009 | By Laura Helmuth

Gobekli Tepe

Gobekli Tepe: The World’s First Temple?

Predating Stonehenge by 6,000 years, Turkey's stunning Gobekli Tepe upends the conventional view of the rise of civilization
November 2008 | By Andrew Curry

Stonehenge secrets

New Light on Stonehenge

The first dig in 44 years inside the stone circle changed our view of why—and even when—the monument was built
October 2008 | By Dan Jones

Stonehenge excavation site

Dispatch from Stonehenge, Day 14

April 13: The Druids Bless Our Departure
April 14, 2008 | By Dan Jones

Digging trench

Dispatch from Stonehenge, Day 10

April 9: Archaeology in a Fishbowl
April 09, 2008 | By Dan Jones

Digging the trench

Dispatch from Stonehenge, Day 9

April 8: The Clock is Ticking
April 08, 2008 | By Dan Jones

An aerial view of Stonehenge in Wiltshire, England.

Dispatch from Stonehenge, Day 1

March 31st: The Excavation Begins
April 01, 2008 | By Dan Jones

Media at the Stonehenge excavation site

Dispatch from Stonehenge, Day 2

April 1st: An Ill Wind Blows
April 01, 2008 | By Dan Jones

Work on Stonehenge began around 3000 B.C., with a ditch circling wood posts.

Mystery Man of Stonehenge

Who was he and where did he come from? And what was his role in the making of the great monument? The discovery of a 4,300-year-old skeleton surrounded by intriguing artifacts has archaeologists abuzz
August 2005 | By Richard Stone

Unusual finds fuel new ideas about the impetus for one of the first long-term settlements (above, the site today).

The Seeds of Civilization

Why did humans first turn from nomadic wandering to villages and togetherness? The answer may lie in a 9,500-year-old settlement in central Turkey
May 2005 | By Michael Balter

Testimony from the Iceman

The 5,000-plus-year-old Neolithic man discovered a decade ago is telling scientists how he lived and died
February 2003 | By Bob Cullen

Ring of Brodgar is on the Orkney Islands

Romancing the Stones

Who built the great megaliths and stone circles of Great Britain, and why? Researchers continue to puzzle and marvel over these age-old questions
July 01, 2002 | By David Roberts

Where Echoes of Spirits Still Dwell

Over a period of ten years, a photographer has documented the vanishing cultures of the Stone Age tribes of New Guinea
October 1997 | By Marlane Liddell

Close encounters with an ancient world

October 1996 | By Smithsonian magazine


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