Neanderthal Dentistry, and the Scientist Glad Not to Have Experienced It
RSS SUMMARY · AGGREGATED FROM TNYT
The prehistoric hominins “apparently were very adept at what we would consider invasive medicine,” said the anthropologist John Olsen.
The prehistoric hominins “apparently were very adept at what we would consider invasive medicine,” said the anthropologist John Olsen.
The prehistoric hominins “apparently were very adept at what we would consider invasive medicine,” said the anthropologist John Olsen.
Continue Reading
The full story continues on The New York Times.
Story Sentry shows a short summary aggregated via RSS. The complete article — original photography, charts, and reporting — lives with the publisher.
The Source
TNYT
World News
The Strait of Hormuz Is Blocked. The World Is Adjusting.
TNYT·40m ago·3 min read
World News
With His New Museum, Obama Offers a Trip to a Parallel America
TNYT·1h ago·3 min read
World News
Amid War, Iran’s Soccer Leader Works to Get His Team to the World Cup
TNYT·2h ago·3 min read
World News
Sherrill Says Immigration Officials Won’t Let Her Visit Detention Center
TNYT·2h ago·3 min read
Related
On this beat
Health
‘Buying stuff like it’s going out of fashion’: Biotech M&A on track for best year since pre-Covid
CNBC·47m ago·3 min read
Health
An Uncertain Path for Americans Exposed to Ebola
TNYT·10h ago·3 min read
Health
Autism therapy has attracted predatory providers who bill for phantom services, pad hours and charge steep fees for care delivered by low-paid workers. Here are five takeaways from a WSJ investigation
TWSJ·14h ago·3 min read
Health
New research could help doctors tweak anesthesia to more resemble natural sleep, reducing risks
TWSJ·15h ago·3 min read
