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Smithsonian Magazine on MSNFour Bewildering Bronze Lions' Heads With Slightly Different Facial Expressions Found in Ancient Roman Grave in IsraelArchaeologists have discovered four bronze discs in a 1,900-year-old Roman grave in central Israel. The artifacts depict ...
Trade in Wild African Lion Bones Banned . JOHANNESBURG, South Africa— Countries from around the world today banned all commercial trade in wild African lion bones and parts in response to growing ...
South Africa to Export 1,500 Lion Skeletons Per Year—Legally. South Africa has nearly doubled the amount of lion bones that can leave the country, in a move many say could encourage illegal trade.
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13,000 years ago, North Americans used cheetah, lion bones to sew furs against the blistering cold - MSN13,000 years ago, North Americans used cheetah, lion bones to sew furs against the blistering cold. ... The team analyzed 32 bone needle fragments collected at the La Prele Mammoth site.
A Roman Gladiator and a Lion Met in Combat. Only One Walked Away. A discovery in an English garden led to the first direct evidence that man fought beast to entertain the subjects of the Roman Empire.
The team also analyzed cave lion claw bones they discovered in the Einhornhöhle Cave in Germany in 2019 that are at least 190,000 years old, based on the layer of sediment in which they were found.
Oldest evidence of Neanderthals hunting cave lions dates to 48,000 years ago, punctured bones reveal
Researchers found cut marks on toe bones from three cave lions dating to between 55,000 and 45,000 years ago that suggest the animals were skinned and their claws preserved.
The bones are believed to be from an old, medium-sized cave lion. There are cut marks across bones including two ribs, some vertebrae, and the left femur, which lead scientists to believe that ...
Freya, a lion cub rescued from the wildfire trade in Lebanon, takes her first steps out of her transport crate at the Drakenstein Lion Park sanctuary in Paarl, South Africa, on Thursday.
Gladiator bones finally confirm human-lion combat in Roman Europe. These 'beast hunts' pitted armed human performers against lions, boars, bears, and more. By Andrew Paul.
13,000 years ago, North Americans used cheetah, lion bones to sew furs against the blistering cold Researchers say their findings are 'conclusive proof' of Paleoindians making tailored garments.
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