Anthropology

Find out everything there is to know about anthropology and stay updated on the latest anthropology news with the comprehensive articles, interactive features and anthropology pictures at LiveScience.com. Learn more as scientists continue to make amazing discoveries about anthropology.
Latest about anthropology

Viking DNA helps reveal when HIV-fighting gene mutation emerged: 9,000 years ago near the Black Sea
By Kristina Killgrove published
A study of more than 3,000 genomes has traced a gene mutation that confers HIV resistance to a person who lived near the Black Sea around 7000 B.C.

Chopped-up skulls found in Maya 'blood cave' were a ritual offering for a good harvest, archaeologists suggest
By Kristina Killgrove published
Archaeologists working at the Cueva de Sangre site in Guatemala have discovered an unusual ancient Maya ritual.

Secret of ancient Maya blue pigment revealed from cracks and clues on a dozen bowls from Chichén Itzá
By Kristina Killgrove published
The question of how the super-blue paint was made now has a second answer.

Secret 'drug room' full of psychedelic 'snuff tubes' discovered at pre-Inca site in Peru
By Kristina Killgrove published
Archaeologists have found conclusive evidence of psychedelic drug use more than 2,500 years ago in Peru.

18th-century monk's anus was stuffed with wood chips and fabric to mummify him, researchers discover
By Kristina Killgrove published
An 18th-century Austrian monk who died of tuberculosis was mummified in an extremely unusual way.

'Overkill' injuries on Bronze Age skeletons reveal fierce feuding in ancient China
By Kristina Killgrove published
A unique Bronze Age cemetery in China has revealed a high frequency of injuries suggestive of intense, violent interactions.

'Groundbreaking' ancient DNA research confirms Pueblo peoples' ties to famous Chaco Canyon site
By Margaret Osborne published
New genetic research confirms what the oral traditions of the Picuris Pueblo people of New Mexico have long described — that they're related to the Indigenous people of Chaco Canyon.

Mass grave of Black Union soldiers slaughtered during the Civil War may lie under a Kentucky soybean field, high-tech scans reveal
By Kristina Killgrove published
Archaeologists have identified two potential mass graves of Black Union soldiers who were targeted by Confederate guerrillas in the Civil War.
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