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From
Live Science:
"This is a story about our human ancestors innovating to survive the
coldest point of the last ice age and using all resources and materials
that they had," Pryor said. "It would have been a challenging place to
live, but they were making a success out of it."
The
suggestion that the bone structure was used for storage and the pits
around it as trash cans "are not Earth-shattering revelations, [but]
they do provide useful insights into the lives of the people who once
occupied the site," said E. James Dixon, an emeritus professor of
anthropology at the University of New Mexico who was not involved in the
study.
The
last ice age is a "fascinating time period in Eurasian archeology,"
Dixon told Live Science in an email, and the study "clearly demonstrates
that modern humans were adapted to higher latitudes at the very height
of the last ice age." The study was published online March 17 in the journal Antiquity. (Read more.)
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