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Scientists identify time and location of first humans who made tools and harpoons out of whale bones
Paleolithic humans used whale bones as tools 20,000 years ago, the earliest evidence of marine tool-making discovered.
Blue Origin's 12th human spaceflight carried the first New Zealander into space and back on Saturday morning in West Texas.
The media site has compiled a list of the “20 Best Small Towns to Buy a Vacation Home,” and an Oregon community makes the cut ...
A new app from Monmouth University's Urban Coast Institute brings ocean data straight to your cell phone. Here is what it ...
With a 2-0 loss on Wednesday against the Blue Jays, the Rangers have now lost three straight series (Yankees, White Sox, Blue ...
Six gray whales have been found dead in the wider San Francisco Bay Area in the last seven days, raising the total number of ...
Blue whale season is underway in San Diego, drawing locals and tourists alike to one tour company who had a hand in NBC's ...
In a groundbreaking study published in Nature Communications, a team of researchers has uncovered the earliest known evidence ...
Stone Age humans scavenged the skeletons of several whale species along the Bay of Biscay in what is now southwestern France ...
Artifacts found at archeological sites in France and Spain along the Bay of Biscay shoreline show that humans have been ...
Ancient scavengers of the beached beasts turned their bones into implements that spread across a large area, researchers say.
Ancient humans began making tools from whale bones at least 20,000 years ago, according to a study published in the journal ...
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