IFLScience on MSN
The First Neolithic Self-Portrait? Stony Human Face Emerges In 12,000-Year-Old Ruins At Karahan Tepe
While snooping around one of the world’s most remarkable archaeological sites, researchers peeled away layers of dusty earth ...
Archaeologists in south-east Turkey have made an extraordinary find—a prehistoric stone face that might turn everything we believe about the origins of art and self-awareness on its head. In the early ...
The Daily Galaxy on MSN
Archaeologists Stunned by 12,000-Year-Old Stone Face, Is This the World’s First Selfie?
A silent face has resurfaced after more than 11,000 years underground. In the arid hills of southeastern Turkey, ...
A groundbreaking archaeological discovery at Karahantepe has shattered expectations about Neolithic symbolic expression, as researchers uncovered the first T-shaped pillar ever found with a distinctly ...
Asian elephants can tell if we pay attention by watching our face and body direction. This shows elephants think deeply about ...
With their massive flapping ears and long trunks, it isn't hard to believe that elephants tend to rely on acoustic and olfactory cues for communication. They use gestures and visual displays to ...
The T-shaped pillar is the first with a face to be found in the Stone Age archaeological sites of Turkey’s Taş Tepeler ...
For the first time, a new study has examined the effectiveness of humans in determining whether we can recognise pain in horses, just by looking at their faces.
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