Sometimes large human constructions offer insights into past human intellectuality. Yasemin Saplakoglu's article on Gobekli Tepe does so for developments in organization, technology, and religion--and the theories of some modern popular writers. And lab studies of the smallest of human components are shedding light on perhaps an even grander scale, as
Archeologists Link Early Humans From Siberia's Lake Baikal to the First North Americans. Paul Seaburn explains the significance of these prehistoric genomic revelations--plus a remarkable side discovery with some relevance to the current pandemic. In that same geographic area, Mindy Weisberger tells us that a
Meteor That Blasted Millions of Trees in Siberia Only 'Grazed' Earth, New Research Says. Here physical modeling of the 1908 Tunguska event has formulated a specific cause that will surprise many. But experts question whether the shock pattern this explanation should create accords with the devastation. And archaeology can literally uncover secrets from the much more recent human past. The
Magellan Times reports how
When Archaeologists Dug Up A Californian Sand Dune, They Discovered An Astonishing Artifact. Archaeological techniques, nature studies, and movie history combine here. (WM)
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