A collection of perforated pebbles from an archaeological site in Israel may be spindle whorls, representing a key milestone in the development of rotational tools including wheels, according to a new ...
Researchers have analyzed a collection of donut-shaped, perforated stones an archaeological site dating back about 12,000 ...
An imposing olive tree on Corfu, known as "Evdokia," is among the oldest trees in Greece, estimated to be between 1086 and ...
Over 100 small stone objects from Neolithic period are the earliest instance of 'spindle whorls,' used to spin fibers into ...
These could be the earliest discovered spindle whorls, technology that was then seemingly lost for 4000 years.
The stones studied by the team predate the cart wheels of the Bronze Age by thousands of years, highlighting a key milestone ...
In northeastern China, archaeologists have used advanced 3D technology to reconstruct the face of a man from more than 5,000 ...
Online gaming communities can often fail to make players feel safe and included due to toxic text and voice chat lobbies. AI ...
Analyzing the golf odds entering the final round to win the 2024 World Wide Technology Championship at El Cardonal at ...
Full 2024 World Wide Technology Championship tee times for Sunday's final round at El Cardonal, featuring Nico Echavarria and ...
From happy moments to heartbreak, our phones' photo reminders might be messing with how we remember—and forget.
The wheel was likely invented around 6,000 years ago, but a new analysis of curious rocks from Israel suggests that wheel-like technologies existed even earlier.