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Could someone explain to me how trade became an important force for trade in the early modern world?
Ok,so trade help people to have new things discover new things.Ok,so when the hominids(ancient people farm) they get surpluses. When they get surpluses it allowed them to trade. When they trade civilizations developed. They have new ideas,new inventions, new things.
When our species first arrived in Europe, the peak of the Ice Age was approaching and the continent was already crawling with a rival: stronger ...
When our species first arrived in Europe, the peak of the Ice Age was approaching and the continent was already crawling with a rival: stronger ...
i need activation code from class zone its really important they colllected our texts books and i wasnt finished with my homework so he said to go online, tomarrow is the last day to turn in all of our missing work so plaese help me!
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Jawbone Found from Earliest Known Northwestern European
A piece of jawbone excavated from a prehistoric cave in England is the earliest evidence for modern humans in Europe, according to an international team of scientists. The bone first was believed to be about 35,000 years old, but the new research study shows it to be significantly older — between 41,000 and 44,000 years old, according to the findings that will be published in the journal Nature. The new dating of the bone is expected to help scientists pin down how quickly the modern humans spread across Europe during the last Ice Age. It also helps confirm the much-debated theory that early humans coexisted with Neanderthals.
Beth Shapiro, the Shaffer Associate Professor of Biology at Penn State University and a member of the research team, explained that the fragment of maxilla — the upper jaw — containing three teeth was unearthed in 1927 in a prehistoric limestone cave called Kent’s Cavern in southwestern England. Records from the original excavations, undertaken by the Torquay Natural History Society located in Devon, England, indicate that the jawbone was discovered 10 feet 6 inches beneath the surface and was sealed by stalagmite deposits. “In 1989, scientists at Oxford University dated the bone as being about 35,000 years old. However, doubts were later raised about the reliability of the date because traces of modern glue, which was used to conserve the bone after discovery, were found on the surface,” Shapiro said. “We knew we were going to have to do additional testing to re-date the bone.” Because the remaining uncontaminated area of bone was deemed too small to re-date, the research team searched through the excavation archives and collections in the Torquay Museum to obtain samples of other animal bones from recorded depths both above and below the spot where the maxilla was found.
New evidence for the earliest modern humans in Europe | Science ...
The timing, process and archaeology of the peopling of Europe by early modern humans have been actively debated for more than a century. Reassessment of the anatomy and dating of a fragmentary upper jaw with three teeth from Kent’s Cavern, Devon, in southern England has shed new light on these issues.
Originally found in 1927, Kent’s Cavern and its human fossil have been reassessed by an international team, including Erik Trinkaus, PhD, professor of anthropology in Arts & Sciences at Washington University in St. Louis, and the results published in Nature
“Modern humans were previously known to be this old in southeastern Europe, but they had not been documented as early in western Europe until the reassessment of the Kent’s Cavern fossil,” Trinkaus says. “The new date for the Kent’s Cavern upper jaw suggests a rapid spread of modern humans once they had crossed into Europe....
New evidence for the earliest modern humans in Europe | Science ...

The timing, process and archeology of the peopling of Europe by early modern humans have been actively debated for more than a century. Reassessment of the anatomy and dating of a fragmentary upper jaw with three teeth from Kent's Cavern in southern England has shed new light on these issues.
Originally found in 1927, Kent's Cavern and its human fossil have been reassessed by an international team, including Erik Trinkaus, PhD, professor of anthropology in Arts & Sciences at Washington University in St. Louis, and the results published in Nature .
The Kent's Cavern human joins the human skull and lower jaw from the Peştera cu Oase, Romania, in establishing the presence of modern humans at both ends of Europe (northwest and southeast) by at least 40,000 years ago.
"Modern humans were previously known to be this old in southeastern Europe, but they had not been documented as early in western Europe until the reassessment of the Kent's Cavern fossil," Trinkaus says. "The new date for the Kent's Cavern upper jaw suggests a rapid spread of modern humans once they had crossed into Europe."
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An Early Modern News
Early Modern Warfare 3 Buyers Don't Need to Worry About Xbox Live Bans1UP.com - Dec 31, 1969
A handful of lucky gamers have Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 3 in hand right now -- and they didn't get the game by downloading the leaked version currently floating around the Internet. At least one Kmart store (located in
Gant Daily - Dec 31, 1969
They compared the external and internal shapes of the teeth with those of modern human and Neanderthal fossils from a number of different sites. They found early modern human characteristics in all but three of the 16 dental characteristics.
Insciences Organisation - Dec 31, 1969
They found early modern human characteristics in all but three of the 16 dental characteristics, confirming that the fossil is a modern human. Team member Dr Beth Shapiro of Pennsylvania State University earlier had tried to extract mitochrondrial DNA
Telegraph.co.uk - Dec 31, 1969
The early humans whose remains were found at a site near Torquay would have made their way out of Africa during a brief warmer period of the last ice age. By Nick Collins, Science Correspondent Modern men, or homo sapiens, evolved in Africa up to
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