Scientists in Siberia have brought back to life a virus that stayed frozen in permafrost for 48,500 years. They pulled it from the ancient ice, thawed it in a secure lab, and watched it infect amoebae ...
Researchers have found evidence for how humans first spread from Siberia to Finland and Northwest Russia thousands of years ago. The rest of this article is behind a paywall. Please sign in or ...
A 14,000-year-old genome scraped from a prehistoric tooth found in southern Siberia is now the oldest known connection linking living Native Americans to North America’s first migrants. Research ...
When you think of Siberia, you probably conjure up images of a sparsely populated, icy tundra — albeit one that's less frozen these days. But from this remote place came a group of ancient peoples ...
Archaeologists confirmed that an ancient settlement in Siberia included the world’s oldest fortress. Nikita Golovanov via Freie Universität Berlin A grassy field fills a swath of land between two ...
A pair of children's teeth that were lost 31,000 years ago in Siberia led scientists to the discovery of a previously unknown population of ancient humans. These people inhabited northeastern Siberia ...
The most complete bear ever recovered from Siberia’s frozen ground looks less like a fossil and more like a sleeping animal ...
Chagyrskaya Cave in Siberia's Altai Mountains, where researchers uncovered Neanderthal stone blades that resemble tools excavated in Europe IAET Ancient Siberia was so nice, eastern European ...
Experts have discovered an ancient prince’s tomb in southern Siberia that may contain treasures or even an ice mummy preserved in the region’s frozen soil. Archaeologist Gino Caspari first noticed the ...
Two 31,000-year-old milk teeth have led to the discovery of an ancient group of people who once lived in northern Siberia – and, along with a 10,000-year-old skull, could offer a better understanding ...
For the first time, scientists have discovered evidence of Denisovans—our long extinct, ancient relatives—outside of Siberia. Researchers found a 160,000-year-old jawbone belonging to the hominin ...
An Alaskan baby buried 11,500 years ago has clued scientists in to a forgotten branch of the Native American family tree. This child’s DNA is more genetically ancient than the ancestors of modern ...