Bronze Age Britons used bone tools for copper mining

A new study shows that people in Bronze Age Britain continued to rely on animal bone tools for copper extraction at the Great Orme mine in North Wales, even after metal tools became available. Researchers examined 150 bone artefacts and found they were shaped for specific tasks like splitting rock and scraping ore. The practice lasted at least nine centuries from 3700 to 2800 years ago.

The analysis focused on bones from the Bronze Age copper-mining complex at Great Orme. Over 30,000 bone fragments have been recovered from the site since excavations began in the early 1990s. More than half came from cattle, with others from sheep, goats and pigs. Archaeologists Olga Zagorodnia of the British Museum and Harriet White, an independent researcher, used high-resolution microscopy and replica experiments to identify deliberate shaping and use-wear patterns on the bones.

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Archaeological dig at Bronze Age Arkaim uncovering sheep skeleton with visualized ancient plague DNA against Eurasian steppe landscape.
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Ancient sheep DNA offers new clues to how a Bronze Age plague spread across Eurasia

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Researchers analyzing ancient DNA say they have detected the plague bacterium Yersinia pestis in the remains of a domesticated sheep from Arkaim, a Bronze Age settlement in the southern Ural region of present-day Russia. The team reports this is the first known identification of a Bronze Age plague lineage in a nonhuman host from that period, a finding that could help explain how an early, pre-flea-adapted form of plague traveled widely across Eurasia.

Analysis of ancient DNA shows that people who replaced Britain's population around 2400 BC came from the river deltas of the Low Countries. These migrants, linked to the Bell Beaker culture, carried a unique mix of hunter-gatherer and early farmer ancestry preserved in wetland regions. Within a century, they accounted for 90 to 100 percent of Britain's genetic makeup, displacing the Neolithic farmers who built Stonehenge.

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A new study suggests that the disappearance of massive herbivores in the Levant around 200,000 years ago prompted early humans to switch from heavy stone tools to lighter, more sophisticated ones. Researchers at Tel Aviv University analyzed archaeological sites and found this tool revolution coincided with a drop in large prey and a rise in smaller animals. The findings, published in Quaternary Science Reviews, propose that hunting smaller prey may have driven cognitive evolution.

A scientific study has uncovered that Ireland's rare Old Irish Goat breed shares its closest genetic ties with goats from the Late Bronze Age, around 3,000 years ago. Researchers from University College Dublin and Queen's University Belfast analyzed ancient remains to confirm this unbroken lineage. The findings highlight the breed's role in Ireland's agricultural history and underscore the need for its conservation.

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Archaeologists have identified the oldest genetically confirmed dog remains from a site in Turkey dating back 15,800 years, pushing the timeline for canine domestication by about 5,000 years. Additional remains from the UK, around 14,300 years old, show dogs were widespread across Europe during the hunter-gatherer era. The findings suggest early humans spread domesticated dogs through cultural exchanges.

A new study in Nature examines over 2,000 years of population history in Argentina's Uspallata Valley, showing local hunter-gatherers adopted farming rather than it being introduced by migrants. Later, maize-dependent groups from nearby areas migrated into the region amid climate instability, disease, and population decline. Kinship networks helped communities endure without evidence of violence.

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Dutch prosecutors unveiled a 2,500-year-old golden Helmet of Cotofenesti on Thursday, recovered more than a year after its theft from the Drents Museum. The artefact, along with two of three stolen Dacian gold bracelets, was displayed flanked by police officers. The third bracelet remains missing.

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