When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. List of European dinosaurs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_European_dinosaurs

    Europe is relatively rich in fossils from the Jurassic-Cretaceous boundary, and much of what is known about European dinosaurs dates from this time. During the Maastrichtian the end of the Cretaceous dinosaurs were dominating western and Central Europe as the Tremp Formation in Spain dates back to that age.

  3. Hominid dispersals in Europe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hominid_dispersals_in_Europe

    In the early Miocene, Europe had a subtropical climate and was intermittently connected to Africa by land bridges. At the same time, Africa was becoming more arid, prompting the dispersal of its tropical fauna—including primates—north into Europe. [6] Apes first appear in the European fossil record 17 million years ago with Griphopithecus. [7]

  4. Prehistoric Europe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prehistoric_Europe

    Various pre-Indo-European substrates have been postulated, but remain speculative; the "Pelasgian" and "Tyrsenian" substrates of the Mediterranean world, an "Old European" (which may itself have been an early form of Indo-European), a "Vasconic" substrate ancestral to the modern Basque language, [84] or a more widespread presence of early Finno ...

  5. Orce Man - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orce_Man

    The Orce Man, Orce Donkey, or Venta Micena fossil is a fossil cranium fragment that was historically considered an infantile early European member of Homo. However, later researched suggested that the remains actually belonged to the equine species Equus altidens .

  6. Paleolithic Europe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paleolithic_Europe

    An artist's rendering of a temporary wood house, based on evidence found at Terra Amata (in Nice, France) and dated to the Lower Paleolithic (c. 400,000 BP) [5]. The oldest evidence of human occupation in Eastern Europe comes from the Kozarnika cave in Bulgaria where a single human tooth and flint artifacts have been dated to at least 1.4 million years ago.

  7. Discosauriscus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Discosauriscus

    Discosauriscus was a small seymouriamorph [1] which lived in what is now Central and Western Europe during the latest Carboniferous [2] and in the Early Permian Period. Its best fossils have been found in the Broumov and Bačov Formations of Boskovice Furrow, in the Czech Republic.

  8. Mauer 1 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mauer_1

    He is regarded rather as a descendant of an early migration to Europe and Asia (depending on the terminology—of Homo erectus or Homo heidelbergensis), whose oldest fossils outside of Africa are about 1.8 million years old. The last descendant of this first migration to Europe was Neanderthal, who became extinct about 30,000 years ago. [21]

  9. Zlatý kůň woman - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zlatý_kůň_woman

    Location of the Zlatý kůň fossil, with an age of at least ~43,000 years, which has yielded genome-wide data. The Zlatý kůň woman is the fossil of an ancient woman, an Early European modern human, dated to around 43,000 years ago. She was discovered in the Koněprusy Caves in the Czech Republic in 1950.