A study of Paleolithic skeletons from Central Europe suggests people's teeth were worn down and crowded together because of ...
Wear patterns on the teeth of skeletons found in Central Europe suggest children as young as 6 may have been wearing labrets ...
Ice Age Europeans may have sported cheek piercings, suggested by unusual dental wear patterns analyzed by anthropologist John Willman. His study proposes that these piercings, or labrets ...
A group of Ice Age hunter-gatherers living in central Europe may have adorned their faces with cheek piercings at as early as ...
It was a mystery that similarly intrigued biological anthropologist John Willman of the University of Coimbra in Portugal.
New scientific research suggests that cheek piercings were popular as long ago as 30,000 years, as chipped teeth and bones ...
Parents in the Ice Age let their kids get away with some pretty wild stuff.