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“That makes sense because modern humans moved out of caves about 60,000 years ago,” added study co-author and Virginia Tech ...
Bedbug numbers soared when humans left caves and moved to cities, scientists find - Scientists believe the bedbugs were ...
They have been bugging people since they hopped off a bat and attached themselves to a Neanderthal around 60,000 years ago.
Ever since a few enterprising bed bugs hopped off a bat and attached themselves to a Neanderthal walking out of a cave 60,000 ...
Around 60,000 years ago, a few adventurous bed bugs made a bold move. They left their bat hosts behind and climbed onto ...
From fleas to mosquitoes, there's no shortage of organisms we like to consider pests – and, not surprisingly, the majority ...
The researchers found that, unlike the bat lineage of bed bugs, the human lineage grew dramatically around 13,000 and 7,000 ...
STONE Age people had a far more troublesome enemy than sabre-tooth tigers — bed bugs. Their first settlements — like Fred ...
Cavemen suffered from bedbugs, according to a study. The small insects have been plaguing human sleep for at least 50,000 ...