Archaeology

780,000-Year-Old Charcoal Reveals How Early Humans Mastered Fire

Ancient inhabitants of the Gesher Benot Ya’aqov site in Israel likely used some kind of earth oven that maintained a temperature below 500 degrees Celsius to cook their fish. Image credit: Ella Maru / Tel Aviv University.

Hominins at the Acheulian site of Gesher Benot Ya’aqov in Israel relied on driftwood gathered along a lakeshore to fuel their hearths, according to new research led by archaeologists from the Institut Català de Paleoecologia Humana i Evolució Social and Bar-Ilan University; 780,000-year-old charcoal fragments from the site show that survival wasn’t about finding the perfect wood — it...

Paleontology

New Triassic Dinosaur Species Identified in New Mexico

An artistic rendition of Ptychotherates bucculentus. Image credit: Megan Sodano / Virginia Tech.

A new genus and species of carnivorous herrerasaurian dinosaur has been described from an incomplete but well-preserved skull found in northern New Mexico, the United States. An artistic rendition of Ptychotherates bucculentus. Image credit: Megan Sodano / Virginia Tech. The new dinosaur species roamed our planet around 201 million years ago during the Rhaetian stage of the latest Triassic. Named...

Physics

CERN Physicists Pin Down W Boson Mass with Unprecedented Precision

CMS candidate collision event for a W boson decaying into a muon (red line) and a neutrino that escapes detection (pink arrow). Image credit: CMS / CERN.

Using data from over one billion proton-colliding events collected at CERN’s Large Hadron Collider (LHC), physicists have measured the mass of the W boson with record accuracy. The value matches the Standard Model’s prediction, giving the researchers confidence that no unexpected force is hiding in the measurement. CMS candidate collision event for a W boson decaying into a muon (red line) and...

Genetics

Ancient DNA Study Rewrites Origins of Europe’s First Dogs

Canadian Eskimo dogs. Illustration by John James Audubon and John Bachman (1845-1848).

Scientists have extracted and analyzed DNA from 216 canid remains, including 181 from Paleolithic and Mesolithic Europe. The oldest data that they recovered are from a 14,200-year-old dog from the Kesslerloch site in Switzerland. Their results suggest that domesticated dogs (Canis lupus familiaris) predate farming and share deep ancestry with wolves (Canis lupus) from Eurasia, challenging ideas about...