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What was life like some 8,000–9,000 years ago for the people on the East Mound at Çatalhöyük, an important Neolithic ...
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Discover Magazine on MSNNeolithic Ireland Was Likely Not Ruled by Incestuous God-KingsDiscover more about Newgrange and the people who were buried there. And what those people can tell us about the elites of ...
A new study suggests that a 9,000-year-old society in Catalhoyuk, a proto-city in southern Anatolia, may have established a ...
New Irish-led research casts doubts over suggestions that an incestuous social elite ruled over the ancient people of Ireland ...
Genetic studies point to female-centered living arrangements in Neolithic Çatalhöyük. Yet, power may not have rested solely ...
New research has cast doubts over suggestions an incestuous social elite ruled over the ancient people of Ireland more than 5 ...
They determined that the earliest remains date to around 5000 b.c., suggesting that the settlement was likely founded by people who came from the west, where agriculture was by then well established.
New research cast doubts over suggestions an incestuous social elite ruled over the ancient people of Ireland, 5500 years ago.A paper led by ...
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Live Science on MSNAncient 'female-centered' society thrived 9,000 years ago in proto-city in TurkeyGenetic analysis of skeletons buried in a Neolithic proto-city in Turkey reveals that female lineages were important in early ...
DNA from Stone Age burials in ancient Anatolia reveals the earliest known female-centered society in a farming community.
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