University of Arkansas: Study Results Consistent With Dog Domestication During Ice Age
February 21, 2020
February 21, 2020
FAYETTEVILLE, Arkansas, Feb. 21 [TNSbiologyresearch] -- The University of Arkansas issued the following news:
Analysis of Paleolithic-era teeth from a 28,500-year-old fossil site in the Czech Republic provides supporting evidence for two groups of canids - one dog-like and the other wolf-like - with differing diets, which is consistent with the early domestication of dogs.
The study, published in the Journal of Archaeolgical Science, was co-directed by Peter Ungar, Dist . . .
Analysis of Paleolithic-era teeth from a 28,500-year-old fossil site in the Czech Republic provides supporting evidence for two groups of canids - one dog-like and the other wolf-like - with differing diets, which is consistent with the early domestication of dogs.
The study, published in the Journal of Archaeolgical Science, was co-directed by Peter Ungar, Dist . . .