News

Humans only discovered Arne Ovamgrotta in 1991, but it was a haven for at least 46 species over 75,000 years ago.
Scientists uncover a 75,000-year-old Arctic ecosystem in Norway, revealing extinct mitochondrial lineages in polar bears, ...
The remains of 46 types of animals from the ice age have been found in a cave on the coast of Northern Norway.
The bones of a vast community of 46 animals in a 75,000-year-old cave in Norway have provided a stunning and rare snapshot of ...
Frozen remains of prehistoric animals are emerging from the permafrost, unlocking secrets of the Ice Age. These 9 prehistoric creatures were discovered in near-perfect condition — some with intact ...
Lions are some of the largest cats on the planet, and extinct subspecies used to be even larger than modern lions.
As the Arctic warms faster than anywhere else on Earth, animals that have evolved to survive the cold face unprecedented ...
A recent study in Norway unveils 75,000-year-old animal remains, challenging previous assumptions about Ice Age megafauna ...
The earlier study had uncovered stone tools on the island of Flores at a site called Wolo Sege, which provided evidence of ...
Mammoths and other giant creatures of the Ice Age such as woolly rhinos survived longer than scientists thought, coexisting with humans for tens of thousands years before they vanished for good ...
A new temporary exhibit at the Pittsburgh Zoo & Aquarium takes visitors back in time to come face-to-face with incredible extinct animals. Ice Age: Frozen in Time runs from April 14 through Sept. 1.