Science
Ancient Pottery Reveals First Evidence of Prehistoric Honey Hunting in West Africa 3,500 Years Ago – SciTechDaily
A team of scientists, led by the University of Bristol, with colleagues from Goethe University, Frankfurt, has found the first evidence for ancient honey hunting,…

Image of Nok terracotta figurines. Credit: Goethe University
A team of scientists, led by the University of Bristol, with colleagues from Goethe University, Frankfurt, has found the first evidence for ancient honey hunting, locked inside pottery fragments from prehistoric West Africa, dating back some 3,500 years ago.
Honeybees are an iconic species, being the world’s most important pollinator of food crops. Honeybee hive products, including beeswax, honey and pollen, used both for food and medicinal…
-
Noosa News8 hours ago
How Lily Steele-Park took her rapist to court and won
-
General22 hours ago
‘Potential’ hacker contacts Qantas over data breach
-
Business12 hours ago
Ford CEO makes stunning prediction about artificial intelligence
-
General23 hours ago
Fears for next anti-Semitic firebombing on home soil