Chinese archaeologists have recently discovered a large and uniquely structured cemetery dating back to 2800BC-2600BC about ...
The rise of pastoralist peoples in the Eurasian steppes and their westward spread some 5,000 years ago may have been fuelled by sheep herding and people exploiting their milk.
From domestication to the use of milk and wool to cultural and economic developments, sheep have played a central role in the evolution of human societies. Without livestock like sheep, as well as ...
The Dmanisis Gora is one of several documented fortresses that popped between the Middle East and the Eurasian Steppe sometime ... better understand how the landscape has changed and to what ...
Situated at the boundary between Europe, the Eurasian Steppe, and the Middle East ... To understand how the landscape of the site had evolved, the orthophotos were compared with 50-year-old ...
Situated at the crossroads of Europe, the Middle East, and the Eurasian Steppe, the Caucasus has long been a cultural ... To better understand how the landscape evolved, researchers compared the drone ...
Grasslands in Asia and North America differ in their responses to drought, according to a paper in the journal Nature led by ...
Grasslands in Asia and North America differ in their responses to drought, according to a new article. The findings show that differences in the dominant grasses and lower species diversity in the ...
The North Pontic region's genetic diversity over 3,500 years reflects continuous migration and mixing, blending European, ...