Sacrifices of “sun stones” occurred around the same time a volcanic eruption in 2900 BC dimmed the sun throughout Northern ...
A volcanic eruption sometime around 2,900 BCE in what is now Northern Europe may have blocked out the sun and subsequently harmed the agriculture-depended Neolithic peoples living there.
An eruption that must have had equally devastating consequences for the Neolithic peoples who lived in Northern Europe at the time and who were deeply dependent on agriculture. This new insight ...
An eruption that must have had equally devastating consequences for the Neolithic peoples who lived in Northern Europe at the time and who were deeply dependent on agriculture. This new insight ...
An eruption that must have had equally devastating consequences for the Neolithic peoples who lived in Northern Europe at the time and who were deeply dependent on agriculture. This new insight ...
Over the years, a variety of mysterious engraved stone plaques have been unearthed in Denmark. The decorative artifacts date to around 2900 B.C.E., during the Neolithic period. Now, researchers have ...
some late Neolithic hunter-gatherer communities, such as the Pitted Ware Culture, preserved figurative traditions. This includes zoomorphic and anthropomorphic figurines made of clay or amber, ...
Women were at the centre of early Iron Age British communities, a new analysis of 2,000-year-old DNA reveals. The research, published in the journal Nature on Wednesday, found that British Celtic ...
Evidence from the site indicates that Neolithic people deposited the stones ... the impact on the early agricultural societies living in northern Europe must have been severe, according to Iversen.
Europe is home to 231 UNESCO World Heritage sites which are categorised as natural wonders, but despite their beauty they are ...