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A 7,000-year-old man whose bones were left behind in a Spanish cave had the dark skin of an African, but the blue eyes of a Scandinavian. He was a hunter-gatherer who ate a low-starch diet and ...
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IFLScience on MSNEuropeans Were Mostly Dark-Skinned Until Roman Times, Ancient DNA SuggestsIt was also during this era that the first known occurrence of light skin, blonde hair, and blue eyes was detected, in the ...
A man who lived on the Iberian peninsula before Europeans became farmers probably had blue eyes but dark hair and skin, according to scientists who have sequenced his DNA. This surprising ...
They also had some physical traits in common too, one of which was blue eyes and dark skin. Writes Michael Balter in Science: One surprise is that the La Braña man had dark skin and blue eyes ...
THE DNA of a hunter-gatherer who lived in Spain some 7,000 years ago suggests ancient Europeans had dark skin and blue eyes. Genetic material recovered from a tooth of La Brana 1, an ancient man ...
LONDON — “Cheddar Man,” Britain’s oldest, nearly complete human skeleton, had dark skin, blue eyes and dark curly hair when he lived in what is now southwest England 10,000 years ago ...
Spain), had blue eyes and dark skin, new research reveals. La Braña 1, the name used to baptize a 7,000 years old individual from the Mesolithic Period, whose remains were recovered at La Braña ...
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Scientists Just Discovered That Most Europeans Had Dark Skin As Recently As 3,000 Years Agoa dark-skinned, blue-eyed man who lived in Britain 10,000 years ago. When he was first found in Gough’s Cave in 1903, researchers assumed he likely had fair hair, light eyes, and paler skin ...
DNA from a 10,000-year-old skeleton found in an English cave suggests the oldest-known Briton had dark skin and blue eyes, researchers said Wednesday. Scientists from Britain's Natural History ...
An ancient European hunter-gatherer man had dark skin and blue eyes, a new genetic analysis has revealed. The analysis of the man, who lived in modern-day Spain only about 7,000 years ago ...
Most prehistoric Europeans had dark skin, hair and eyes well into the Iron Age, about 3,000 years ago, new research finds. Scientists found that the genes that cause lighter skin, hair and eyes ...
A 7,000-year-old man whose bones were left behind in a Spanish cave had the dark skin of an African, but the blue eyes of a Scandinavian. He was a hunter-gatherer who ate a low-starch diet and ...
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